12 research outputs found

    Fistulizing Crohn's disease

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    Crohn's disease (CD), characterized by idiopathic transmural inflammation anywhere along the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, is increasing in incidence worldwide for unknown reasons. The transmural inflammation can result in inflammatory, stricturing, or penetrating (fistulizing) phenotypes, all of which are notoriously difficult to treat. When a patient has inflammatory disease, medical immunosuppressive therapy with corticosteorids, immunomodulators, or biologics may be helpful before a fibrostenotic disease process starts. Once there is fibrosis, bowel damage is difficult to reverse, and proximal fistulizing disease may develop. Fistulizing disease, one of the most notoriously difficult disease manifestations can also occur anywhere along the GI tract, affecting portions as proximal as the duodenum or as distal as the anus with perianal and rectovaginal fistulas (RVFs)

    Management of pouch neoplasia: consensus guidelines from the International Ileal Pouch Consortium

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    Surveillance pouchoscopy is recommended for patients with restorative proctocolectomy with ileal pouch–anal anastomosis in ulcerative colitis or familial adenomatous polyposis, with the surveillance interval depending on the risk of neoplasia. Neoplasia in patients with ileal pouches mainly have a glandular source and less often are of squamous cell origin. Various grades of neoplasia can occur in the prepouch ileum, pouch body, rectal cuff, anal transition zone, anus, or perianal skin. The main treatment modalities are endoscopic polypectomy, endoscopic ablation, endoscopic mucosal resection, endoscopic submucosal dissection, surgical local excision, surgical circumferential resection and re-anastomosis, and pouch excision. The choice of the treatment modality is determined by the grade, location, size, and features of neoplastic lesions, along with patients' risk of neoplasia and comorbidities, and local endoscopic and surgical expertise

    Asymmetries and visual field summaries as predictors of glaucoma in the ocular hypertension treatment study

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    PURPOSE. To evaluate whether baseline visual field data and asymmetries between eyes predict the onset of primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) in Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study (OHTS) participants. METHODS. A new index, mean prognosis (MP), was designed for optimal combination of visual field thresholds, to discriminate between eyes that developed POAG from eyes that did not. Baseline intraocular pressure (IOP) in fellow eyes was used to construct measures of IOP asymmetry. Age-adjusted baseline thresholds were used to develop indicators of visual field asymmetry and summary measures of visual field defects. Marginal multivariate failure time models were constructed that relate the new index MP, IOP asymmetry, and visual field asymmetry to POAG onset for OHTS participants. RESULTS. The marginal multivariate failure time analysis showed that the MP index is significantly related to POAG onset (P &lt; 0.0001) and appears to be a more highly significant predictor of POAG onset than either mean deviation (MD; P = 0.17) or pattern standard deviation (PSD; P = 0.046). A 1-mm Hg increase in IOP asymmetry between fellow eyes is associated with a 17% increase in risk for development of POAG. When threshold asymmetry between eyes existed, the eye with lower thresholds was at a 37% greater risk of development of POAG, and this feature was more predictive of POAG onset than the visual field index MD, though not as strong a predictor as PSD. CONCLUSIONS. The MP index, IOP asymmetry, and binocular test point asymmetry can assist in clinical evaluation of eyes at risk of development of POAG.</p
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