Search Information for Natural History of Crohn’s Disease
This segment summarizes information collected from a search of published medical literature. Various search databases were used including Ovid Medline, Medline Daily, Medline In-Process, Embase, Biosis Previews, and Derwent Drug File. Also, where noted, information made available through other means (e.g., publicly available regulatory briefing documents, other public reports, or medical textbooks) may have been included. Information has been cited in the body of the text, references follow each section, and a full bibliography is provided for the website.
Search Terms
The initial literature search included the following terms: anemia, ankylosing spondylitis, arthropathy, aphthous stomatitis, cancer, CDAI, CDEIS, clostridium difficile, C-reactive protein, colonoscopy, Crohn, Crohn’s, COX-2 inhibitors, diagnosis, diet, differential diagnosis, disability, disease activity and assessment, environment, epidemiology, erythema nodosum, extraintestinal manifestations, fecal calprotectin, fecal lactoferrin, gastroenteropathy, genetics, hospitalization, hygiene hypothesis, hypoalbuminemia, IBDQ, inflammatory bowel disease, inflammatory bowel disease questionnaire, intestinal inflammation, laboratory tests, lymphoma, metastatic crohn’s disease, microscopic colitis, mortality, mycobacterium avium paratuberculosis, natural history, NOD2, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, NSAIDs, orofacial granulomatosis, osteoporosis, pANCA, perforation, perinuclear anti-neutrophil, primary sclerosing cholangitis, quality of life, sacroiliitis, serologic markers, short bowel syndrome, stomatitis, surgery, toxic megacolon, unemployment, uveitis, pediatric child, children, adolescent, pediatric Crohn’s disease activity index, IMPACT survey, IMPACT questionnaire, extraintestinal manifestations, child and chronic illness and adaptation or psychosocial or psychological. Search results were then limited to "English" and "Human." As content continues to be updated, additional search terms and methods may be utilized as appropriate. Where appropriate, truncation was used in the searches.
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Content on this page was last reviewed on October 31, 2009.
Content on this page was last changed on March 25, 2009.
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