How effective is the use of the elemental diet compared to corticosteroid therapy in the management of Crohn's disease

   

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Abstract

Introduction:

Crohn’s disease is an inflammatory bowel disease causing transmural inflammation within the gastrointestinal tract. Corticosteroid therapy is used to treat exacerbations of crohn’s but has many side effects. The elemental diet, containing essential basic nutrient forms is a recognised alternative treatment.1 This research explores its effectiveness and investigate potential mechanisms.

Methods:

Two randomised control trials found with 3 MESH terms (“Foods, Formulated”, “Crohn disease”, “steroids”, yielding 87 results) comparing the elemental diet and corticosteroids since RCTs provide the highest hierarchy of evidence. Both compared the  two treatments for acute management, and one compares them for long term management too, making them useful to investigate the effectiveness of the elemental diet. The first involves 21 acutely ill patients with an exacerbation of crohn’s disease randomly allocated to receive prednisolone 0.75mg/kg/day or and elemental diet for 4 weeks.2 The second trial was similar, looking at 42 patients with active disease and built on the relationship by assessing the probability of maintaining remission at 6 months.

   

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