Our bodies protect us from harmful substances such as viruses and bacteria by recognising proteins on these foreign bodies called antigens. When our bodies detect antigens somewhere they shouldn’t be, our immune system will attack and destroy them to keep us safe.(4)
However, our digestive system is constantly exposed to new antigens that are found in bacteria and the food we eat, so our bodies tell our immune system not to worry about the antigens in our gut because they’re allowed to be there. This is called “gut homeostasis”.(5)
We don’t fully understand why,
but in a person with IBD, their body does not understand that it’s fine for the foreign bodies to be in their digestive system and instead tries to fight them off. This is what causes inflammation of the gut and the other consequential symptoms such as bleeding and weight loss.(6)