Chapter 03 · The Basics

Disease Origin — What Causes Crohn’s?

Why some people develop Crohn’s disease while others don’t is still an open question. Researchers have some theories and have identified a few risk factors — but there’s no single cause, and no one thing you did or didn’t do is to blame.

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Crohn’s is not your fault

This is the most important thing to know in this chapter: Crohn’s is not caused by anything a person did — not by what you ate, how stressed you were, or any choice you made.

What Scientists Think Is Going On

Researchers have a few leading theories about how Crohn’s starts in the body:

🦠 Immune system “stuck on”

One theory is that a virus or bacterial infection may trigger Crohn’s. After the immune system fights off the infection, it doesn’t quite shut off — and it keeps mistakenly attacking healthy tissue in the gut.

🌱 The gut microbiome

Another theory points to the gut flora (microbiome) — the trillions of tiny helpful microbes that live in your digestive system. An imbalance in that mix may play a role in how Crohn’s develops.

Known Risk Factors

Even though the exact cause isn’t known, researchers have identified certain things that can make Crohn’s more likely to develop.

Genetic factors

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A family history of Crohn’s, especially in first-degree relatives (parents or siblings)

Where and how you live

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Living in developed countries and northern climates
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Urban living in industrialized areas
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Smoking is a known risk factor

💡What about stress and diet?

Stress and diet don’t cause Crohn’s. They can, however, make symptoms worse during a flare-up, which is why later chapters talk about how to eat and manage stress well when you’re living with Crohn’s.

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If any symptom is worrying you, contact your medical team. TeenHealthInsight is a health education resource — not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from your doctor or gastroenterologist.
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