22 research outputs found

    How useful is rectal endosonography in the staging of rectal cancer?

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    It is essential in treating rectal cancer to have adequate preoperative imaging, as accurate staging can influence the management strategy, type of resection, and candidacy for neoadjuvant therapy. In the last twenty years, endorectal ultrasound (ERUS) has become the primary method for locoregional staging of rectal cancer. ERUS is the most accurate modality for assessing local depth of invasion of rectal carcinoma into the rectal wall layers (T stage). Lower accuracy for T2 tumors is commonly reported, which could lead to sonographic overstaging of T3 tumors following preoperative therapy. Unfortunately, ERUS is not as good for predicting nodal metastases as it is for tumor depth, which could be related to the unclear definition of nodal metastases. The use of multiple criteria might improve accuracy. Failure to evaluate nodal status could lead to inadequate surgical resection. ERUS can accurately distinguish early cancers from advanced ones, with a high detection rate of residual carcinoma in the rectal wall. ERUS is also useful for detection of local recurrence at the anastomosis site, which might require fine-needle aspiration of the tissue. Overstaging is more frequent than understaging, mostly due to inflammatory changes. Limitations of ERUS are operator and experience dependency, limited tolerance of patients, and limited range of depth of the transducer. The ERUS technique requires a learning curve for orientation and identification of images and planes. With sufficient time and effort, quality and accuracy of the ERUS procedure could be improved

    Five years’ experience with capsule endoscopy in a single center

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    Capsule endoscopy (CE) is a novel technology that facilitates highly effective and noninvasive imaging of the small bowel. Although its efficacy in the evaluation of obscure gastrointestinal bleeding (OGIB) has been proven in several trials, data on uses of CE in different small bowel diseases are rapidly accumulating in the literature, and it has been found to be superior to alternative diagnostic tools in a range of such diseases. Based on literature evidence, CE is recommended as a first-line investigation for OGIB after negative bi-directional endoscopy. CE has gained an important role in the diagnosis and follow-up of Crohn’s disease and celiac disease and in the surveillance of small bowel tumors and polyps in selected patients. Capsule retention is the major complication, with a frequency of 1%-2%. The purpose of this review was to discuss the procedure, indications, contraindications and adverse effects associated with CE. We also review and share our five-year experience with CE in various small bowel diseases. The recently developed balloon-assisted enteroscopies have both diagnostic and therapeutic capability. At the present time, CE and balloon-assisted enteroscopies are complementary techniques in the diagnosis and management of small bowel diseases

    Is Enteroscopy Necessary for Diagnosis of Celiac Disease?

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    Celiac disease (CD) is an autoimmune inflammatory disease of the small intestine as a result of reaction to wheat protein, gluten. Exclusion of dietary gluten is the mainstay of the treatment that necessitates a precise diagnosis of the disease. Serological screening may aid in identifying patients with suspected CD, which should be confirmed by intestinal biopsy. It has been shown that duodenal biopsies are good for detection of the disease in most patients. However, there is a group of patients with positive serology and inconclusive pathology. As a result of the widespread use of serology, many patients with equivocal findings grow quickly. Unfortunately current endoscopic methods can only diagnose villous atrophy, which can be present in the later grades of disease (i.e., Marsh III). To diagnose CD correctly, going deeper in the intestine may be necessary. Enteroscopy can reveal changes in CD in the intestinal mucosa in 10%-17% of cases that have negative histology at initial workup. Invasiveness of the method limits its use. Capsule endoscopy may be a good substitute for enteroscopy. However, both techniques should be reserved for patients with suspected diagnosis of complications. This paper reviews the current literature in terms of the value of enteroscopy for diagnosis of CD. (C) 2012 Baishideng. All rights reserved.WoSScopu

    Relationship Between Serum Adenosine Deaminase Levels and Liver Histology in Autoimmune Hepatitis

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    AIM To evaluate the relationship between serum adenosine deaminase (ADA) levels and histological features in patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). METHODS A total of 80 subjects (52 AIH cases and 28 healthy controls) were included in the study. Patients were diagnosed according to the simplified criteria suggested by the International Autoimmune Hepatitis Group. All of the cases had been diagnosed with AIH between 2010-2015 at Hacettepe University, Department of Gastroenterology. Serum blood samples were collected and stored at -80 °C until the biochemical estimation of ADA activity. The diagnosis of patients was confirmed by liver biopsy. Serum ADA > 20 U/L was considered to be high level. RESULTS Mean serum ADA levels were significantly higher in AIH patients than those in healthy controls (25.4 ± 9.6 U/L vs 12.8 ± 2.2 U/L, P 20 U/L were found in 63.5% AIH patients and in 0% healthy controls (P < 0.001). Mean serum ADA levels were significantly increased in each stage of histological activity: 15.2 ± 3.5 U/L for patients with mild interface hepatitis, 23.1 ± 10.0 U/L for patients with moderate interface hepatitis and 30.9 ± 7.0 U/L for patients with severe interface hepatitis (P < 0.001). Correlation analysis showed that there was a positive association between serum ADA levels and histological activity (r = 0.71, P < 0.001). Receiver operating characteristic analysis suggested that 24.5 U/L was the optimum cut-off point of ADA level for severe interface hepatitis (sensitivity 88%, specificity 85.2%, area under the curve: 0.88). CONCLUSION Because of the positive correlation with inflammatory activity, serum ADA level may be a potential biomarker for predicting or monitoring histological activity in patients with AIH.PubMedWoSScopu

    Effects Of L-Thyroxine On Gastric Motility And Ghrelin In Subclinical Hypothyroidism: A Prospective Study

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    Introduction: Overt hypothyroidism affects the gastrointestinal system. Limited data are available regarding gastric motility in subclinical hypothyroidism (SCH). Objective: The aim of this study was to assess gastric motility-related gastric symptoms and levels of ghrelin in patients with SCH compared with those in healthy control subjects and to evaluate the potential effects of L-thyroxine replacement therapy. Methods: Twenty premenopausal women with SCH and 20 age- and body mass index-matched healthy control women were enrolled in the study. The gastroparesis cardinal severity index questionnaire was used to reveal gastrointestinal motility changes, and electrogastrographic activities were measured. Fasting and postprandial ghrelin levels at 30, 60, and 120 minutes were determined during a mixed meal test. All tests were repeated after 6 months when patients were in the euthyroid state. Results: The gastroparesis cardinal severity index score, fasting tachygastria ratio, and postprandial/fasting bradygastria ratio in electrogastrography were higher in patients with SCH compared with control subjects (P = .03, P = .04, and P = .04, respectively). All 3 parameters significantly improved after L-thyroxine replacement therapy (P = .001, P = .005, and P = .02 respectively) reaching levels similar to those of control subjects. Baseline and area under the curve for ghrelin during mixed meal tests did not show a difference between patients with SCH and control subjects and before and after L-thyroxine replacement in SCH. Conclusion: Gastric dysmotility and the resultant upper gastrointestinal symptoms can be observed in SCH, and symptomatology related to dysmotility and parameters appear to be improved with thyroid hormone replacement. Our results also suggest that ghrelin levels in response to a meal are similar between women with SCH and healthy women and that normalization of thyroid function by L-thyroxine does not modulate these levels.WoSScopu

    Human leucocyte antigen genotyping in celiac disease: Reasons for inappropriate use

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    Background: Celiac disease (CD) is an autoimmune enteropathy, which may need further Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) testing beyond autoantibodies for diagnosis due to the necessity of lifetime gluten restriction. HLA genotyping test is useful in certain scenarios for CD diagnosis and screening. The aim of this study was to evaluate the reasons for inappropriate requesting of HLA testing. Methods: One hundred and fifteen patients, who had been tested for CD-related HLAs, were included in this study. Final diagnosis, indication of HLA test, serological and histopathological findings were re-evaluated to determine the inappropriate usage of HLA testing. Results: Among all patients, 44 (38.2%) were diagnosed with CD according to their genotyping results. The frequency of DQ 2.5, DQ8 and DQ2.2 haplotypes among these patients was 57.2%, 28.2%, and 14.3%, respectively. HLA test was performed inappropriately in 35 (30.4%) of patients. The most common reason was serology and pathological findings of patients were already conclusive as CD in 15 (42.9%) patients. Serology negative patients were tested without any supporting finding of CD in 11 (31.4%) patients. Last identified reason was that patients whose serology and intestinal biopsy were not conclusive as CD in 9 (25.7%) patients. Conclusions: Before requesting HLA typing test, patient’s data should be thoroughly evaluated to confirm the need for test

    Effects of l

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    Cyanoacrylate Associated Foreign Body Granulomatous Gastritis: A Report Of Three Cases

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    Granulomas are rarely seen in gastric biopsies mostly as an involvement of granulomatous diseases like sarcoidosis, Crohn's disease, infections, neoplasms, and vasculitis. Here, we claim cyanoacrylate as a foreign body type granuloma-causing agent in the stomach after vascular embolisation. We present cyanoacrylate associated gastric changes of three cases: two endoscopic biopsies and one gastric resection. In two cases, cyanoacrylate associated ulcers and granulomatous inflammation were observed in gastric mucosal biopsies following endoscopic examination after 7 months and 6 years of the glue injections, respectively. In the third case, the cyanoacrylate injection was performed 2 months prior to the surgery. Then the patient underwent distal pancreatectomy for pancreatic adenocarcinoma and during the operation a gastric mass was resected with a suspicion of tumoral infiltration. These three cases demonstrated that glue exposure causes active chronic inflammation with foreign body type granulomas, mucosal ulceration, and bleeding in the gastric mucosa. Even further, it can induce mass formation in the injection sites.PubMe
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