I also tried supplemting fish oil. It didn't seem to work. The same website I found that suggested an all Protein det and low carbs also suggested fish oil. So I tried it at the same time. No effect.
I should add that for the past year and a half I have been taking
AST Multi Pro 32X Multivitamin and
Ultimate Nutrition Super Vitamin B-Complex. Don't know if this may have helped any...
About
Pentasa, this is from
http://www.ccfa.org/info/about/ucp
Four major classes of medication are used today to treat ulcerative colitis:
1.Aminosalicylates (5-ASA): This class of anti-inflammatory drugs includes sulfasalazine and oral formulations of mesalamine, such as Asacol,® Colazal,.® Dipentum,® or Pentasa,® and 5-ASA drugs also may be administered rectally (Canasa® or Rowasa® ). These medications typically are used to treat mild to moderate symptoms. Without inflammation, symptoms such as diarrhea, rectal bleeding, and abdominal pain can be diminished greatly. Aminosalicylates are effective in treating mild to moderate episodes of ulcerative colitis, and are also useful in preventing relapses of this disease.
2.Corticosteroids: Prednisone and methylprednisolone are available orally and rectally. Corticosteroids nonspecifically suppress the immune system and are used to treat moderate to severely active ulcerative colitis. (By "nonspecifically," we mean that these drugs do not target specific parts of the immune system that play a role in inflammation, but rather, that they suppress the entire immune response.) These drugs have significant short- and long-term side effects and should not be used as a maintenance medication. If you cannot come off steroids without suffering a relapse of your symptoms, your doctor may need to add some other medications to help manage your disease.
3.Immune modifiers: Azathioprine (Imuran®), 6-MP (Purinethol®), and methotrexate. Immune modifiers, sometimes called immunomodulators, are used to help decrease corticosteroid dosage . Azathioprine and 6-MP have been useful in reducing or eliminating some patients' dependence on corticosteroids. They also may be helpful in maintaining remission in selected refractory ulcerative colitis patients (that is, patients who do not respond to standard medications). However, these medications can take as long as three months before their beneficial effects begin to work.
4.Antibiotics: metronidazole, ampicillin, ciprofloxacin, others.