Is there a possessive for the word "Crohn's"?

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I'm working on a formal essay submission and need input. I figure, if anyone would know it's someone here.

Grammar buffs, I NEED you.

Would the possessive of Crohn's be spelled Crohn's'? Or just left Crohn's?

Sentence I need it for:

"No aspect of my life was left untouched, and my loving relationship with food unraveled as I experienced Crohn’s’ all-encompassing impact."

I'm sure I could rework the word order, but I'm limited to a set word count and I'm a bit fond of the flow.
 
Crohn's was named after Burrill Bernard Crohn who was a GI doctor. It's already possessive. Maybe rewording it to, "No aspect of my life was left untouched, and my loving relationship with food unraveled as I experienced the all-encompassing impact of Crohn's," or something like that. I'm no writer though.
 
I'm not a writer or grammar buff either but to use two apostrophes just looks all wrong. I'd tend go with what Jennifer suggests, or if you wanted to keep your own wording then I'd leave out the apostrophe after the s ....crohn's rather than crohn's'
An interesting question though :)
Bunty x
 
I suggest:

"No aspect of my life was left untouched, and my loving relationship with food was unraveled by the all-encompassing impact of Crohn's."
 
Using two apostrophes is ugly (although I don't know if it is actually more correct).
Using one is incorrect... if you think of a sentence like: my best birthday present was John's, none of the others matched John's special appeal. The meaning has changed.
You shouldn't have to change the sentence, but it's probably the best solution.
 
"Crohn's" is a shortened version of "Crohn's Disease" so you can always say "Crohn's Disease's symptoms" or whatever.

But when would you use a possessive? You can say cancer symptoms or cancer's symptoms; the first is simply an adjective. So maybe there's no case where you can't simply say "Crohn's" instead of the possessive which probably should be "Crohn's'".

:shifty-t:
 
Crohn's was named after Burrill Bernard Crohn who was a GI doctor. It's already possessive. Maybe rewording it to, "No aspect of my life was left untouched, and my loving relationship with food unraveled as I experienced the all-encompassing impact of Crohn's," or something like that. I'm no writer though.

Just out of interest, do you know how his name was pronounced? I thought it was like "crone" and so "crone's" disease, but my GI consultant calls my ailment "krons" disease.
 

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