Instalab

Research & Answers

Physician-backed insights to optimize your health and reduce long-term risks.

Lymphocytic Colitis: The Condition Your Colonoscopy Can't See

About 60% of adults with lymphocytic colitis experience a single episode that resolves on its own. That's a striking number for a condition that can cause weeks or months of relentless watery diarrhea, urgency, and real disruption to daily life. But here's the catch: because the colon looks perfectly normal during a standard colonoscopy, many people cycle through appointments and tests before anyone thinks to take a biopsy. Without that biopsy, lymphocytic colitis is invisible. Lymphocytic colitis (LC) is a form of microscopic colitis, meaning the inflammation only shows up under a microscope. It typically strikes middle-aged to older adults, with a median age around 59 to 67 years, and is more common in women. The hallmark is chronic, watery, non-bloody diarrhea, often accompanied by abdominal pain, weight loss, and sometimes fecal incontinence. It can significantly affect quality of life even though it carries a largely benign prognosis.

Pancolitis: When Ulcerative Colitis Takes Over the Entire Colon, the Stakes Change

About one in four people diagnosed with limited ulcerative colitis will see their disease creep upward to involve the entire colon within a decade. That progression, called pancolitis, isn't just a change in geography. It marks a shift toward higher relapse rates, more hospitalizations, greater odds of surgery, and an elevated risk of colorectal cancer. If you or someone you care about has UC, understanding what pancolitis means practically is worth the time. Pancolitis refers to continuous inflammation stretching from the rectum all the way through the proximal (upper) colon. It affects roughly 20 to 40% of people with UC, making it the most extensive form of the disease. And while the name sounds dramatic, what really matters is how it changes the playbook for monitoring, treatment, and long-term risk.

IBD vs IBS: Same Symptoms, Completely Different Diseases

Roughly one in three people with inflammatory bowel disease in remission still report the cramping, bloating, and unpredictable bowel habits typically associated with irritable bowel syndrome. Their inflammation is gone on scopes and labs, yet the symptoms persist. This overlap is one reason IBD and IBS get so tangled in people's minds, and why getting the distinction right matters more than most realize. IBD (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) is an immune-mediated inflammatory disease that causes visible, measurable damage to the gut. IBS is a disorder of gut-brain interaction with no detectable inflammation or structural changes. The symptoms can feel identical from the inside. The consequences are not.