What does chronic colitis with inflammatory hyperplasia mean?

Chronic colitis is a chronic inflammatory disease that occurs in the colon. Inflammatory hyperplasia refers to the thickening and enlargement of local tissues under the stimulation of inflammation.
Chronic colitis can be caused by diet, smoking, lifestyle, genetics, infection and immunity, etc. Patients may experience diarrhea, abdominal pain, loss of appetite, abdominal distension, nausea, vomiting and other symptoms, with the progression of the disease can also be complicated by intestinal perforation, intestinal obstruction, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, intestinal cancer, and other diseases and cause severe abdominal pain, defecation stops, bloody stools, pallor, coma and other symptoms.
Inflammatory hyperplasia includes mesenchymal cell hyperplasia and parenchymal cell hyperplasia, and the chance of malignant changes is generally low. Patients with chronic colitis with inflammatory hyperplasia should go to the gastroenterology department of regular hospitals and other related departments, eat a light diet, and undergo regular checkups.