Whipple’s disease is a rare bacterial infection in your small intestine. It affects your body’s ability to digest food and absorb nutrients (malabsorption). You may develop Whipple’s disease after exposure to Tropheryma whipplei, a common bacterium that lives in dirt. Fortunately, a combination of antibiotics kills the bacteria in your body, eases your symptoms and cures the condition.
While the bacterium that causes the disease is common, Whipple’s disease is very rare. Experts analyzing Whipple’s disease cases estimate it affects 9 in 1 million people in the U.S. Not everyone who encounters T.whipplei develops the disease.
Whipple’s disease symptoms develop in phases (stages), starting with joint pain that’s severe and may come and go. The pain typically affects your large joints — your ankles, elbows, hips, knees and shoulders. Healthcare providers may call this the prodromal phase. This phase may last seven or eight years before you develop more symptoms, including:
Between 20% and 40% of people with Whipple’s disease develop central nervous system issues that cause symptoms like:
Experts know that a type of bacteria often found in dirt causes Whipple’s disease. Anyone who encounters the bacteria could be at risk of infection. But Whipple’s disease is rare, and it’s not clear why more people don’t develop the disease after exposure.
Research suggests the following factors may increase your risk of developing the disease:
Whipple’s disease affects your body’s ability to absorb fats, carbohydrates, vitamins and other nutrients from food that passes through your small intestine. It’s a progressive disease, meaning that it gets worse over time and causes new and more serious medical issues, including:
Whipple’s disease that affects your central nervous system can be fatal.
Healthcare providers do a physical examination. They’ll take a medical history and ask about current and past changes in your body. They may do the following tests:
It can take a long time to get rid of the bacteria that cause Whipple’s disease. Treatment includes:
Antibiotics may cause the following side effects:
Tests and procedures used to diagnose lip cancer include:
Lip cancer treatments include:
Surgery. Surgery is used to remove the lip cancer and a margin of healthy tissue that surrounds it. The surgeon then repairs the lip to allow for normal eating, drinking and speaking. Techniques to reduce scarring also are used.
For small lip cancers, repairing the lip after surgery may be a simple procedure. But for larger lip cancers, skilled plastic and reconstructive surgeons may be needed to repair the lip. Reconstructive surgery may involve moving tissue and skin to the face from another part of the body.
Surgery for lip cancer may also involve removing cancerous lymph nodes in the neck.
Radiation therapy. Radiation therapy uses powerful energy beams, such as X-rays and protons, to kill cancer cells. Radiation therapy for lip cancer may be used on its own or it may be used after surgery. The radiation may be aimed only at your lip, or it may also be aimed at the lymph nodes in your neck.
Radiation therapy for lip cancer most often comes from a large machine that precisely focuses the energy beams. But in some cases, the radiation can be placed directly on your lip and left in place for a short time. This procedure, called brachytherapy, allows doctors to use higher doses of radiation.
That’s hard to say. The bacteria that cause Whipple’s disease are everywhere in our environment, particularly in dirt. But not everyone who encounters them develops Whipple’s disease.
People with weak immune systems or who take immunosuppressants have an increased risk of developing the disease. If that’s your situation, it’s a good idea to wear gloves or to wash your hands thoroughly any time you work in dirt and mud.
The most important thing is to take your antibiotics as prescribed. Most people will take antibiotics for at least a year after their diagnosis, and some people may need antibiotics for the rest of their lives.
If you have Whipple’s disease, you’ve been missing out on vital nutrients. Treatment will make you feel better, but you may want to ask a dietitian for recommendations on what you should eat and drink.
Contact your provider if you still have Whipple’s disease symptoms after you start treatment or if your symptoms come back after treatment.
Women have unique health issues. And some of the health issues that affect both men and women can affect women differently.
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