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What It Is and How to Prevent It

To understand pouchitis, you first need to know how an ileal pouch works.
Pouchitis means that J-shaped area has become inflamed. “Inflammation of the ileal pouch (‘J pouchitis’) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease [who have undergone ileoanal anastomatosis] can either be acute or chronic,” says Sandhya Shukla, MD, a gastroenterologist with Atlantic Coast Gastroenterology Associates in Brick Township, New Jersey.
- Lower abdominal pain
- Intestinal cramping
- Urgent bowel movements
- More frequent bowel movements
- Inability to hold in poop
- Straining to poop from pain or blockage
- Feeling like you need to poop but can’t
- Blood in the stool
- Fever or chills
“Patients often describe [pouchitis] as a ‘return of UC-like symptoms’ despite having had surgery,” says Ekta Gupta, MBBS, the chief of gastroenterology at the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore.
Sometimes, symptoms are subtle and confused with other causes, including potential complications of J-pouch surgery like cuffitis (inflammation of the rectal remnant left after pouchitis surgery), irritable pouch syndrome, or bacterial overgrowth, says Gupta.