3 research outputs found
Surgical management of Crohnâs disease: a state of the art review
Purpose: The aim of this review was to examine current surgical treatments in patients with Crohnâs disease (CD) and to discuss currently popular research questions. Methods: A literature search of MEDLINE (PubMed) was conducted using the following search terms: âSurgeryâ and âCrohnâ. Different current surgical treatment strategies are discussed based on disease location. Results: Several surgical options are possible in medically refractory or complex Crohnâs disease as a last resort therapy. Recent evidence indicated that surgery could also be a good alternative in terms of effectiveness, quality of life and costs as first-line therapy if biologicals are considered, e.g. ileocolic resection for limited disease, or as part of combination therapy with biologicals, e.g. surgery aiming at closure of select perianal fistula in combination with biologicals. The role of the mesentery in ileocolic disease and Crohnâs proctitis is an important surgical dilemma. In proctectomy, evidence is directing at removing the mesentery, and in ileocolic disease, it is still under investigation. Other surgical dilemmas are the role of the Kono-S anastomosis as a preventive measure for recurrent Crohnâs disease and the importance of (non)conventional stricturoplasties. Conclusion: Surgical management of Crohnâs disease remains challenging and is dependent on disease location and severity. Indication and timing of surgery should always be discussed in a multidisciplinary team. It seems that early surgery is gradually going to play a more important role in the multidisciplinary management of Crohnâs disease rather than being a last resort therapy
Cyclooxygenase-2 and gastric carcinogenesis
Epidemiological studies have shown that the use of nonsteroid anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) is associated with reduced risk of gastric cancer. The best-known target of NSAIDs is the cyclooxygenase (Cox) enzyme. Two Cox genes have been cloned, of which Cox-2 has been connected with gastric carcinogenesis. Expression of Cox-2 is elevated in gastric adenocarcinomas, which correlates with several clinicopathological parameters, including depth of invasion and lymph node metastasis. This suggests that Cox-2-derived prostanoids promote aggressive behavior of adenocarcinomas of the stomach. Cox-2 expression is especially prominent in intestinal-type gastric carcinoma and it is already present in dysplastic precursor lesions of this disease, which suggests that Cox-2 contributes to gastric carcinogenesis already at the preinvasive stage. Our most recent data show that Cox-2 is expressed in gastric adenomas of trefoil factor 1 deficient mice. Treatment of these mice with a Cox-2 selective inhibitor, celecoxib, reduced the size of the adenomas. Taken together these data support efforts to initiate clinical studies to investigate the effect of Cox-2 inhibitors as chemotherapeutic agents and as adjuvant treatment modalities against gastric neoplasia
Viscoelastic properties of small bowel mesentery at MR elastography in Crohnâs disease: a prospective cross-sectional exploratory study
Abstract Background Creeping fat is a pathological feature of small bowel Crohnâs disease (CD), with literature suggesting that bowel resection with extended mesenteric resection is related to less postoperative recurrences. Conventional imaging is unable to accurately quantify the disease involvement (i.e., fibrosis) of creeping fat. Quantification of disease involvement could be useful in decision-making for additional extended mesenteric resection. We investigated the feasibility of magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) of the mesentery and if MRE is capable to detect fibrotic disease involvement of mesentery in active CD. Methods Multifrequency MRE yielded spatial stiffness (shear wave speed, SWS, |G*|) and fluidity maps (Ď). Viscoelastic properties of seven CD patientsâ mesentery were compared to age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers (HV) (MannâWhitney U-test). Within CD patients, the affected and âpresumablyâ unaffected mesentery were compared (Wilcoxon-signed rank test). Repeatability was tested in 15 HVs (BlandâAltman analysis, coefficient of variation [CoV]). Spearman rank correlations were used to investigate the relation between microscopically scored amount of mesenteric fibrosis and viscoelastic parameters. Results SWS, |G*|, and Ď of affected mesentery in CD were higher compared to HV (pâ=â0.017, pâ=â0.001, pâ=â0.017). Strong correlations were found between percentage of area of mesenteric fibrosis and SWS and |G*| (pâ<â0.010). No differences were found within CD between affected and presumably unaffected mesentery. Repeatability of SWS showed 95% limits of agreement of (-0.09, 0.13 m/s) and within-subject CoV of 5.3%. Conclusion MRE may have the potential to measure fibrotic disease involvement of the mesentery in CD, possibly guiding clinical decision-making with respect to extended mesenteric resection. Trial registration Dutch trial register, NL9105 , registered 7 December 2020. Relevance statement MRE may have the potential to measure the amount of mesenteric fibrosis of the affected mesenteric fat in active Crohnâs disease, giving more insight into disease progression and could potentially play a role in clinical decision-making for extended mesenteric resection. Key points ⢠MRE of the mesentery in patients with active CD is feasible. ⢠Fluidity and stiffness of the mesentery increase in active CD, while stiffness correlates with the histopathological amount of mesenteric fibrosis. ⢠MRE provides biomarkers to quantify mesenteric disease activity in active CD. Graphical Abstrac