
doi: 10.1159/000197966
pmid: 976626
Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease are complex, problematic diseases of unknown etiology in man, and appropriate experimental models would be useful in elucidating their pathogenesis and treatment. Although there have been numerous attempts to produce inflammatory ulcerative colonic disease in laboratory animals resembling those human disease forms, none has been entirely successful. Investigators have conducted experiments involving almost every etiological factor suggested for initiation of these diseases. The methods reviewed in this paper include production of experimental colitis by vascular impairment, and immunological methods such as bacterial infection, allergic reactions, direct and indirect hypersensitivity reactions, as well as autoimmune mechanisms. The results of carrageenan-induced colitis, irradiation, dietary, and drug-induced techniques are also discussed and the frequency and nature of spontaneous colonic lesions in animals is summarized.
Adult, Colon, Guinea Pigs, Middle Aged, Carrageenan, Colitis, Diet, Rats, Disease Models, Animal, Dogs, Animals, Humans, Colitis, Ulcerative, Rabbits, Intestinal Mucosa
Adult, Colon, Guinea Pigs, Middle Aged, Carrageenan, Colitis, Diet, Rats, Disease Models, Animal, Dogs, Animals, Humans, Colitis, Ulcerative, Rabbits, Intestinal Mucosa
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