Surgery for Crohn's disease usually is needed if ongoing symptoms do not respond to medicine or if side effects of medicine cause other serious problems.
Severe or ongoing symptoms should be closely watched and discussed with your doctor.
Complete resolution of symptoms may take a number of days or, in some cases, these ongoing symptoms may persist for months after poisoning.
Surgery appears to lead to better outcomes if there are ongoing symptoms after three to six months of conservative treatment.
Your child may need treatment for other disorders that may be causing ongoing symptoms, such as:
But this assumes that you are having ongoing symptoms but no sign of nerve damage.
After gallbladder surgery (cholecystectomy), a few people have ongoing symptoms, such as belly pain, bloating, gas, or diarrhea.
After surgery, a few people have ongoing symptoms, called postcholecystectomy syndrome.
Generalized anxiety disorder, which involves several months of ongoing physical symptoms that occur along with anxiety.
A few people have ongoing, severe symptoms.