There is no scientific basis for the so-called local remedies for chronic enteritis, and blind use may not have a therapeutic effect, or even damage to the body.
Chronic enteritis is a variety of pathogenic microorganisms or autoimmune abnormalities caused by intestinal inflammation, the main manifestations of abdominal pain, diarrhea, and even mucus pus and blood stools.
The treatment of enteritis usually involves the use of medication against the pathogens that cause enteritis, such as antibiotics such as sulfamethoxazole for dysentery bacilli, and praziquantel for schistosomiasis. Autoimmune enteropathies, such as Crohn’s disease, are treated with salazosulfapyridine.
In addition, because patients with enteritis usually have diarrhea and other symptoms that can easily lead to dehydration and electrolyte disorders, they need symptomatic treatment and rehydration.
The folk remedy for chronic enteritis has not been widely clinically verified, and its therapeutic effect is still doubtful, and some of the drugs in the remedy may even be hazardous to human health, and its use is not recommended.
Patients with enteritis are advised to go to a regular medical institution to follow the doctor’s instructions for standardized treatment.