{"id":14543,"date":"2020-11-24T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2020-11-24T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-ulcerative-colitis-24-year-old-loses-colon-rectum-ulcerative-colitis-tiktok\/"},"modified":"2020-11-24T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2020-11-24T00:00:00","slug":"condition-ulcerative-colitis-24-year-old-loses-colon-rectum-ulcerative-colitis-tiktok","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-ulcerative-colitis-24-year-old-loses-colon-rectum-ulcerative-colitis-tiktok\/","title":{"rendered":"This 24-Year-Old Shares How She Lost Her Colon and Rectum to IBD in Viral TikTok Video"},"content":{"rendered":"
Ulcerative colitis, a form of inflammatory bowel disease, affects more than 750,000 people<\/a> in North America—and 24-year-old Jillian Kotzer, who lives in Vancouver, is one them.<\/p>\n In a TikTok video<\/a> and in an interview with Health<\/em>, Kotzer details her battle with the disease, which began when she was 17. The first signs, she says in the video, included "really bad stomach cramps<\/a>" and "pooping out blood." After ignoring her symptoms and losing a lot of weight without knowing why, Kotzer realized she needed to see a doctor. "[I] was literally pouring blood out of [my] butt every single time [I] went to the bathroom," Kotzer says on TikTok.<\/p>\n jillian-kotzer<\/span> . This chronic condition causes inflammation and ulcers in the digestive tract that typically lead to diarrhea, pain, and rectal bleeding, among other symptoms. Ulcerative colitis is possibly due to an immune system malfunction. "Your large intestine is basically dead," Kotzer recounts doctors telling her. <\/p>\n After two years of taking medication to treat the condition to no avail, Kotzer ultimately had to have surgery to remove her large intestine. Doctors replaced it with a surgical opening leading to an ostomy bag, which hangs outside her body and fills with waste.<\/p>\n "Sitting in a hospital bed and trying so many different medications while still being in pain was no way to live," Kotzer tells Health<\/em>, about her decision to undergo surgery. Unfortunately, that wasn't the end of her battle with the disease.<\/p>\n RELATED:<\/strong> Everyone Thinks I'm the Picture of Health—but Every Day I Struggle With Ulcerative Colitis<\/a><\/p>\n jillian-kotzer<\/span> , which people with ulcerative colitis have a higher overall risk of. <\/p>\n RELATED: <\/strong>12 Colorectal Cancer Risk Factors to Know About<\/a><\/p>\n Kotzer thought it would take six weeks to recover, but she wasn't back to normal for 10 months, in part because she developed an infection that burst open her anal stitches, leaving a 20 centimeter-deep hole were her anus should be. "It looked like I gave birth," she says, explaining that the pain was so bad, she couldn't sit down for a year. "It was hard because I looked normal on the outside but I was having to deal with this every week and it hurt so bad."<\/p>\n