Inflammatory bowel disease in kids under 5 on rise in Canada: study
TORONTO — Canada has one of the highest rates of pediatric inflammatory bowel disease in the world, and the number of young children being diagnosed with the lifelong disease has risen dramatically, a study has found.
Researchers found cases of inflammatory bowel disease, or IBD, in children under age five went up by 7.2 per cent each year between 1999 and 2010. IBD primarily includes Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis — conditions that affect the digestive tract and cause chronic diarrhea, blood in the stool, abdominal pain and weight loss.
Crohn’s is known as the “cheek-to-cheek disease” because it can cause destructive inflammation throughout the gastrointestinal tract from the mouth to the anus, but is often confined to the lower part of the small intestine and the colon. Ulcerative colitis affects only the large intestine, or colon.
“The number of children under five being diagnosed with IBD is alarming because it was almost unheard of 20 years ago and it is now much more common,” said lead author Dr. Eric Benchimol, a pediatric gastroenterologist at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario in Ottawa.


