Thursday, December 5, 2013

Ulcerative Colitis/Iron-Deficiency Anemia Can Kill?

  
  
   Inflammatory Bowel Disease (Ulcerative Colitis) with Iron-Deficiency Anemia can kill?  Possibly.  If it wasn't for a blood transfusion years ago--I would not be here; alas, maybe not a bad thing, considering the agony of the whole spicy enchilada. 
 
   Good thing about Blood Transfusions, unless of course you're a Jehovah's Witness and keen upon the Book of Exodus--you get plenty of IRON and are not damned to hell.  Monstrous amounts of IRON I'm talk'n.  And the sanguine fluid has been screened a myriad of times, protecting you from the possibility of any futuristic infection associated with the ichor-like infusion.
  
   Liver is a fundamental necessity for Iron-Deficiency Anemia; nevertheless, if associated with Ulcerative Colitis, it can mentally FREAK YOU CRAZY to imbibe the bloody organ that processes all the toxins in a mammal's physiological system; still, CALF LIVER seems the most benign, though morally perplexing--poor babies.  But if you're fading into entropy; next, invoke Saint Francis to pray for the beast, and fry yourself up some IRON-INFUSED CALF LIVER with regular butter. 
  
   Iron Pills may constipate, which is pure Pandemonium for a sorry soul afflicted with Ulcerative Colitis, for besides numerous, bloody, mucous-like explosions of fecal matter that won't stop, there is also the flip side of the coin:  Painful constipation, your bowels in LOCK-UP, fumbling no feces save squirts of crimson blood.  Yeah, being fun is sick.  If my Doc would only infuse me with REMICADE IV; next, I would enter a perpetual state of remission, but due to the Iron-Deficiency Anemia and quasi-malnutrition, I suffer and swallow steroids or insert Nuclear-Powered Suppositories into my anal cavity.  This is life.  Don't cry about it.  Just cope, invoke the Angels and Saints, and hope your State offers the soothing solace of natural medicine.  Best of fortune to all those suffering from Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Iron-Deficiency Anemia.
 
   Too, my books @ Apple iTunes, the Nook, and Amazon.com.
  
   Sincerely, Mark David King