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Comparison of small bowel findings using capsule endoscopy between Crohn’s disease and intestinal tuberculosis in Koreaopen accessComparison of small bowel findings using capsule endoscopy between Crohn’s disease and intestinal tuberculosis in Korea

Other Titles
Comparison of small bowel findings using capsule endoscopy between Crohn’s disease and intestinal tuberculosis in Korea
Authors
김용길Kyung-Jo Kim민영기
Issue Date
2020
Publisher
영남대학교 의과대학
Keywords
Capsule endoscopy; Crohn disease; Small intestine; Tuberculosis
Citation
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine, v.37, no.2, pp 98 - 105
Pages
8
Journal Title
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine
Volume
37
Number
2
Start Page
98
End Page
105
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/3603
DOI
10.12701/yujm.2019.00374
ISSN
2384-0293
2384-0293
Abstract
Background: Little is known about capsule endoscopy (CE) findings in patients with intestinal tuberculosis who exhibit small bowel lesions. The aim of the present study was to distinguish between Crohn’s disease (CD) and intestinal tuberculosis based on CE findings. Methods: Findings from 55 patients, who underwent CE using PillCam SB CE (Given Imaging, Yoqneam, Israel) between February 2003 and June 2015, were retrospectively analyzed. Results: CE revealed small bowel lesions in 35 of the 55 patients: 19 with CD and 16 with intestinal tuberculosis. The median age at diagnosis for patients with CD was 26 years and 36 years for those with intestinal tuberculosis. On CE, three parameters, ≥10 ulcers, >3 involved segments and aphthous ulcers, were more common in patients with CD than in those intestinal tuberculosis. Cobblestoning was observed in five patients with CD and in none with intestinal tuberculosis. The authors hypothesized that a diagnosis of small bowel CD could be made when the number of parameters in CD patients was higher than that for intestinal tuberculosis. The authors calculated that the diagnosis of either CD or intestinal tuberculosis would have been made in 34 of the 35 patients (97%). Conclusion: The number of ulcers and involved segments, and the presence of aphthous ulcers, were significantly higher and more common, respectively, in patients with CD than in those with intestinal tuberculosis. Cobblestoning in the small bowel may highly favor a diagnosis of CD on CE.
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