7 research outputs found

    Extravasation and fluid collection on computed tomography imaging in patients with colonic diverticular bleeding.

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    OBJECTIVE:We evaluated the characteristics of patients with diverticular bleeding in whom emergency endoscopy should be proactively performed and those in whom it is unnecessary for spontaneous hemostasis following conservative treatment. METHODS:This study involved 132 patients in whom diverticular bleeding was diagnosed on lower gastrointestinal endoscopy. We evaluated the rate of identification of the bleeding diverticulum during endoscopy and the rate of spontaneous hemostasis following conservative treatment. RESULTS:In 26 patients (20%), bleeding diverticulum was identified during endoscopy. Extravasation or fluid collection on CT imaging was an important factor of successful identification of the bleeding source on endoscopy. Of the 104 patients in the conservative treatment group, 91 (87%) were able to be discharged after spontaneous hemostasis. Univariate analysis revealed a high rate of spontaneous hemostasis in patients without extravasation and fluid collection on CT imaging, those without adhesion of blood during endoscopy, those without diabetes, and those with a hemoglobin level ≥10 g/dL. CONCLUSION:In patients with colonic diverticular bleeding, extravasation or fluid collection on CT is an important factor related to the identification of the bleeding diverticulum. Patients without characteristic CT findings had a high rate of spontaneous hemostasis after conservative treatment. BACKGROUND:Diverticular bleeding is the most frequent cause of lower gastrointestinal bleeding accounting for 20%-40% of all cases in Japan and 20%-48% of all those in the Western countries[1, 2]. The prevalence of colonic diverticula tends to increase with age; thus, the overall prevalence of diverticular bleeding is expected to increase in the future. In Japan, the Japanese Gastroenterological Association published guidelines on colonic diverticulitis in 2017; these guidelines recommend the performance of lower gastrointestinal endoscopic examination within 24 h in patients with lower gastrointestinal bleeding suspected to be diverticular bleeding[3]. It has been reported that, for patients with lower gastrointestinal bleeding, urgent endoscopy helps avoid embolotherapy, colectomy, massive blood transfusion, and repeat bleeding[1, 4, 5]. However, it is often difficult to identify the bleeding point [6]; further, there are many challenging cases wherein it is difficult to decide whether urgent endoscopy should be performed in situations where there is insufficient medical staff, such as during nighttime and on holidays. Bleeding is reported to stop spontaneously with conservative treatment alone in 70% of diverticular bleeding cases[7, 8]. In particular, when determining the treatment policy for diverticular bleeding and in the case of patients at high risk of complications following endoscopy, such as older patients, those with poor performance status or cardiovascular disease, and those in whom spontaneous hemostasis can be expected, urgent endoscopy should be avoided, and elective endoscopy should be selected. Therefore, the type of cases wherein urgent endoscopy is effective and the type wherein it is unnecessary need to be clarified. Thus far, there have been very few reports of the characteristics of patients with diverticular bleeding in whom spontaneous hemostasis was achieved. We aimed to assess the characteristics of patients in whom emergency endoscopy should be proactively performed and those for whom it is unnecessary. Thus, we retrospectively analyzed the identification rate for the responsible diverticulum in patients with diverticular bleeding and the rate of spontaneous hemostasis following conservative treatment

    Complemental Diagnosis of IgG4-Related Pancreaticobiliary Diseases by Multiple Hypoechoic Lesions in the Submandibular Glands

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    The diagnosis of autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) and immunoglobulin G4-related sclerosing cholangitis (IgG4-SC) may require a somewhat invasive pathological examination and steroid responsiveness. This retrospective study assessed the complemental diagnosis of AIP and IgG4-SC using submandibular gland (SG) ultrasonography (US) in 69 patients, including 54 patients with AIP, 2 patients with IgG4-SC, and 13 patients with both AIP and IgG4-SC. The data from the physical examination and US of SGs to diagnose AIP (n = 67) and IgG4-SC (n = 15) were analyzed. The steroid therapy efficacy in resolving hypoechoic lesions in SGs was evaluated in 36 cases. The presence of IgG4-related pancreaticobiliary disease with multiple hypoechoic lesions in SGs was reduced from 31 to 11 cases after steroid therapy, suggesting that multiple hypoechoic lesions in SGs are strongly associated with IgG4-positive cell infiltrations. Multiple hypoechoic lesions in SGs were observed in 53 cases, whereas submandibular swelling on palpation was observed in 21 cases of IgG4-related pancreaticobiliary diseases. A complemental diagnosis of IgG4-related pancreaticobiliary diseases without a histological diagnosis and steroid therapy was achieved in 57 and 68 cases without and with multiple hypoechoic lesions in SGs, respectively. In conclusion, multiple hypoechoic lesions in SGs are useful for the complemental diagnosis of IgG4-related pancreaticobiliary diseases

    A Simple Clinical Scoring System to Determine the Risk of Pancreatic Cancer in the General Population

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    This study aimed to develop and validate a simple scoring system to determine the high-risk group for pancreatic cancer (PC) in the asymptomatic general population. The scoring system was developed using data from PC cases and randomly selected non-PC cases undergoing annual medical checkups between 2008 and 2013. The performance of this score was validated for participants with medical checkups between 2014 and 2016. In the development set, 45 PC cases were diagnosed and 450 non-PC cases were identified. Multivariate analysis showed three changes in clinical data from 1 year before diagnosis as independent risk factors: ΔHbA1c ≥ 0.3%, ΔBMI ≤ −0.5, and ΔLDL ≤ −20 mg/dL. A simple scoring system, incorporating variables and abdominal ultrasound findings, was developed. In the validation set, 36 PC cases were diagnosed over a 3-year period from 32,877 participants. The AUROC curve of the scoring system was 0.925 (95%CI 0.877–0.973). The positive score of early-stage PC cases, including Stage 0 and I cases, was significantly higher than that of non-PC cases (80% vs. 6%, p = 0.001). The simple scoring system effectively narrows down high-risk PC cases in the general population and provides a reasonable approach for early detection of PC
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