European Journal of Radiology
Volume 62, Issue 2 , Pages 153-159, May 2007

Crohn's disease at the small bowel imaging by the ultrasound-enteroclysis

  • Vlastimil Válek

      Affiliations

    • Department of Radiology, Faculty Hospital Brno, Jihlavska 20, 625 00 Brno, Czech Republic
    • Tel.: +420 532 233 007.
  • ,
  • Petr Kysela

      Affiliations

    • Department of Surgery, Faculty Hospital Brno, Jihlavska 20, 625 00 Brno, Czech Republic
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +420 532 232 983; fax: +420 532 233 900.
  • ,
  • Markéta Vavříková

      Affiliations

    • Department of Radiology, Faculty Hospital Brno, Jihlavska 20, 625 00 Brno, Czech Republic
    • Tel.: +420 532 233 007.

Received 28 January 2007; accepted 30 January 2007.

Abstract 

Summary

Crohn's disease is more likely a systemic disease governed by a shift in the immune response, thus affecting the whole MALT system. Its treatment should be as conservative as possible and surgery is usually taking place after complications like indolent fistulations, stenoses, bleeding, or bowel perforation started. Standard radiological methods to check the extent of the disease are loaded either with certain radiation exposure (enteroclysis, CT) or lack standardization (ultrasound). The aim of this small study was to evaluate the worth of ultrasound-enteroclysis in detecting the extent and complications of the Crohn's disease in surgically treated patients.

Material and methods

Since 1997, when we started with the ultrasound-enteroclysis, 246 surgical performances were involved into our study. Out of them, 181 had conventional abdominal intestinal ultrasound as well as conventional enteroclysis within 1 week. Remaining 65 cases were diagnosed by the ultrasound-enteroclysis. Intestinal ultrasound was performed on the Ultramark 3000 HDI device with autofocussable convex 5MHz and linear 7.5MHz probes or nowadays ATL 5000 HDI, 7–12MHz linear probe. No contrast enhancement was used. Enteroclysis was done with the Micropaque suspension diluted 1:1 with HP-7000 300ml with its application rate up to 75ml/min followed by HP-7000 solution 2000ml, application rate of 120ml/min. The patients with ultrasound-enteroclysis were applied HP 7000 solution only (2000ml, rate 100ml/s) via an enteroclysis catheter. All investigations were video-recorded.

Results

Consent with the per-operative finding was reached in 162 from 181 enteroclyses and in 169 of 181 ultrasounds. Ultrasound-enteroclysis was precise in 61 cases from 65.

Among these, 60 patients had the recurrence during the treatment proved by clinical and laboratory results. This re-activation was clearly revealed in 38 from 43 cases by enteroclysis, 41 from 43 by US and in 16 from 17 by ultrasound-enteroclysis. From 30 patients that developed acute complication non-responding to the conservative therapy (abscesses, fistulas and intestinal obstructions) there were 18 from 20 accurately diagnosed by enteroclysis, only 12 from 20 by US and 9 from 10 by US-enteroclysis. The differences were either statistically non-significant or there were too small numbers to give sensible statistical results, but low sensitivity of ultrasound in complications (p=0.05).

Conclusion

US-enteroclysis seems to became the standard examination of patients with Crohn's disease mainly in those with unclear conventional ultrasound. The most important fact is that this examination significantly decreases the radiation load when maintaining high sensitivity. This is very important namely in patients with Crohn's disease that require life-long observation and repeated examinations. This examination is much more easy to standardize than the conventional US.

Keywords: Crohn's disease, Diagnostics, Enteroclysis, Ultrasound, Surgery, Treatment, Small intestine

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PII: S0720-048X(07)00060-5

doi:10.1016/j.ejrad.2007.01.038

European Journal of Radiology
Volume 62, Issue 2 , Pages 153-159, May 2007