Abstract

Mycobacterium avium, subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) causes a chronic disease of the intestines in dairy cows and a wide range of other animals, including nonhuman primates, called Johne's ("Yo-knee's") disease. MAP has been consistently identified by a variety of techniques in humans with Crohn's disease. The research investigating the presence of MAP in patients with Crohn's disease has often identified MAP in the "negative" ulcerative colitis controls as well, suggesting that ulcerative colitis is also caused by MAP. Like other infectious diseases, dose, route of infection, age, sex and genes influence whether an individual infected with MAP develops ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. The apparently opposite role of smoking, increasing the risk of Crohn's disease while decreasing the risk of ulcerative colitis, is explained by a more careful review of the literature that reveals smoking causes an increase in both diseases but switches the phenotype from ulcerative colitis to Crohn's disease. MAP as the sole etiologic agent of both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease explains their common epidemiology, geographic distribution and familial and sporadic clusters, providing a unified hypothesis for the prevention and cure of the no longer "idiopathic" inflammatory bowel diseases.

Highlights

  • Ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease are chronic diseases of the gastrointestinal tract that together are usually referred to as idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease (IIBD)

  • Correspondence: ellenpiercemd@gmail.com Spokane Valley, Washington, USA. This commentary proposes that ulcerative colitis is caused by MAP

  • Crohn’s disease in unrelated individuals is an infectious disease; it is caused by a microorganism transmitted in water by the fecal-oral route Let’s begin in the middle of the story

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Summary

Introduction

Ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease are chronic diseases of the gastrointestinal tract that together are usually referred to as idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease (IIBD). MAP causes a chronic disease of the intestines [9,10] in a variety of animals [11,12,13,14,15,16], including nonhuman primates [17], that shares some histologic (i.e., microscopic) similarities to the changes found in Crohn’s disease. This commentary proposes that ulcerative colitis is caused by MAP. Like other infectious diseases [19], a variety of factors including dose, route of infection, age, sex and genes influences whether an individual infected with MAP develops ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease

Discussion
65. Kyle J
69. Loftus EV Jr: Clinical epidemiology of inflammatory bowel disease
76. Falkinham JO
88. Pierce ES
96. Mayberry JF
98. Grant IR
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