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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute self-limited colitis (ASLC) must be distinguished from chronic ulcerative colitis (CUC) for the proper early management of patients with the acute onset of bloody diarrhea. This study was undertaken to determine if any clinical, endoscopic, microbiologic, or histologic parameters can be used to make this distinction reliably and quickly. Forty-eight patients with ASLC, 36 patients with chronic ulcerative colitis during their first attack [CUC(F)], and 84 patients with recurrent flares of chronic ulcerative colitis [CUC(R)] were studied prospectively. The presence of fever (temperature greater than 100 degrees F),
abdominal pain
, or the time from onset of bloody diarrhea to presentation were not discriminatory. Overall clinical and endoscopic severity were identical among the three groups. Microbiologic studies identified an infectious agent in only 42% of patients with ASLC. Histopathologic features always distinguished patients with CUC from those with ASLC. No case of ASLC was misdiagnosed histologically as CUC or vice versa. Plasmacytosis in the lamina propria extending to the mucosal base and mucosal distortion were present in all cases of CUC(F) and CUC(R), but were absent in all cases of ASLC. The finding of focal
cryptitis
during the resolving phase of ASLC could be confused with similar lesions in biopsy specimens from patients with Crohn's disease and mandates clinical follow-up. Histopathology is thus the only reliable diagnostic tool for the rapid differentiation of ASLC from CUC. However, biopsy specimens are only diagnostic when obtained during the acute phase of illness; that is, usually within the first 4 days from the onset of symptoms.
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PMID:Histopathology differentiates acute self-limited colitis from ulcerative colitis. 379 68
A clinical syndrome of chronic colitis unique to the sigmoid colon harboring diverticular was recently reported; its histopathological appearance has not been fully elucidated. In this study, the authors analyzed the clinical and pathological features of 23 patients (age range, 38-87 years; median age, 72 years) with diverticular disease-associated chronic colitis. Nineteen presented with hematochezia; four had
abdominal pain
. Colonoscopic visualization of the mucosa showed patchy or confluent granularity and friability affecting the sigmoid colon encompassing diverticular ostia. Colonic mucosae proximal and distal to the sigmoid were endoscopically normal. Mucosal biopsy specimens showed features of idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease that included plasmacellular and eosinophilic expansion of the lamina propria (100%), neutrophilic
cryptitis
(100%) with crypt abscesses (61%), basal lymphoid aggregates (100%), distorted crypt architecture (87%), basal plasmacytosis (61%), surface epithelial sloughing (61%), focal Paneth cell metaplasia (48%), and granulomatous
cryptitis
(26%). Concomitant rectal biopsies obtained in five patients demonstrated histologically normal mucosa. Fourteen patients treated with high-fiber diet or antibiotics or both improved clinically, as did nine patients administered sulfasalazine or 5-aminosalicylic acid. Five patients underwent sigmoid colonic resection, three for stricture with obstruction and two for chronic blood loss anemia. Among a control population of 23 age- and gender-matched patients with diverticular disease without luminal surface mucosal abnormality, none required resection during the same follow-up period. By Fisher's exact test, a statistically significant difference in outcome for patients with and without colitis was detected (p = 0.049). In addition, three patients developed ulcerative proctosigmoiditis 6, 9, and 17 months after the onset of diverticular disease-associted colitis. The data indicate that diverticular disease-associated chronic sigmoid colitis expresses morphological features traditionally reserved for idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease. Its clinical and endoscopic profiles permit distinction from Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Patients with chronic colitis in conjunction with diverticula are at increased risk for sigmoid colonic resection. Diverticular disease-associated chronic colitis may also precede the onset of conventional ulcerative proctosigmoiditis in some cases.
...
PMID:Diverticular disease-associated chronic colitis. 854 Jun 14
The histologic features of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) of the colon are well documented, but chronic mucosal changes associated with GVHD are poorly described. We report here the clinicopathologic findings from five patients with a history of bone marrow transplantation in which colonoscopic biopsies showed chronic mucosal changes reminiscent of chronic idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The patients ranged in age from 2.5 to 31 years. Bone marrow transplantations were performed for leukemia (3 patients), Hodgkin's disease (1 patient), and metachromatic leukodystrophy (1 patient). Endoscopy was performed because of complaints of
abdominal pain
and diarrhea in all of the five patients. The mean time after transplantation in which histologic features of chronicity were identified was 5.8 months (range, 3-16 mo). All of the five patients had prior colonic biopsies showing acute GVHD. One patient had a previous episode of cytomegalovirus infection. Chronicity was characterized by mild-to-moderate architectural distortion, ie., villiform surface with crypt branching and atrophy, similar to that seen in chronic idiopathic IBD. The lamina propria was hypocellular, with prominent small blood vessels. Focal fibrosis of the lamina propria was noted. One patient had active
cryptitis
. Superimposed changes of acute GVHD were mild to absent. None of the patients had a history of IBD before receiving the bone marrow transplant. Changes associated with chronicity can be observed in mucosal biopsy specimens from patients with GVHD. It is uncertain whether these changes are directly caused by GVHD or are the result of superimposed infections. The association of chronic mucosal change in the setting of GVHD with the clinical diagnosis of chronic GVHD needs additional investigation.
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PMID:Chronic mucosal changes of the colon in graft-versus-host disease. 964 87
Collagenous colitis (CC) and lymphocytic colitis (LC) are clinical syndromes characterized by the presence of chronic watery diarrhea, few or no endoscopic abnormalities and biopsies that typically show normal crypt architecture, increased mononuclear inflammation in the lamina propria, absence of neutrophils, and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes. Patients with CC also have a thickened subepithelial collagen layer. We have noted, anecdotally, that biopsy specimens from some patients with CC or LC contain certain histologic features, such as Paneth cell metaplasia (PM), that are normally seen in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), or other types of healed colitis, and thus may cause diagnostic difficulty. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the prevalence and significance of IBD-like morphologic features in colonic mucosal biopsies from patients with CC or LC. Five hundred thirty-one routinely processed hematoxylin and eosin-stained colonic mucosal biopsies from 150 patients with clinically, endoscopically, and histologically confirmed CC (79 patients, male/female ratio: 14/65, mean age: 60 yr) or LC (71 patients, male/female ratio: 13/58, mean age: 55 yr) were evaluated in a blinded fashion for a variety of histologic features, including active crypt inflammation (
cryptitis
+/- crypt abscess), surface ulceration, Paneth cell metaplasia, crypt architectural irregularity, number of intraepithelial lymphocytes, and thickness of the subepithelial collagen layer (CC only). The results were compared between CC and LC and correlated with the clinical and endoscopic data. None of the patients had or developed IBD during the study period. Active crypt inflammation was a common finding in both groups, seen in 24 of 79 CC patients (30%) and 27 of 71 LC patients (38%). Surface ulceration was not seen in any of the LC biopsies but was present in 2 of 79 (2.5%) CC patients. Paneth cell metaplasia was frequent in both groups and significantly more common in CC compared with LC patients. Forty-four percent of CC patients, but only 9 of 63 (14%) of LC patients had Paneth cell metaplasia (p <0.001). Crypt architectural irregularity, although rare, was present in 6 of 79 patients with CC (7.6%) and 3 of 71 (4.2%) patients with LC. In patients with CC, the presence of Paneth cell metaplasia was associated with more severe disease characterized by the presence of
abdominal pain
(p <0.001) and a higher frequency of bowel movements (>3 bowel movements/day) (p = 0.06). Also, active crypt inflammation correlated with antibiotic use at the time of clinical presentation (p = 0.04) and was present in the only two patients who had positive stool cultures (one each for and ). However, none of the other histologic findings correlated with any of the other clinical or endoscopic features, such as type of symptoms, stool consistency, type of medical treatment, associated autoimmune diseases or outcome (complete, partial, or no resolution) in either group of patients. Pathologists should be aware that some histologic features normally associated with IBD such as crypt irregularity and neutrophilic
cryptitis
and crypt abscesses are not uncommon in patients with CC or LC and that the presence of one or more of these features should not necessarily be interpreted as evidence against either of these diagnoses.
...
PMID:Prevalence and significance of inflammatory bowel disease-like morphologic features in collagenous and lymphocytic colitis. 1240 17
The original histopathologic description of chronic graft-versus-host disease (CGVHD) of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract was from autopsy series. There is little information on the evaluation of living patients with CGVHD and GI symptoms. We reviewed data on 40 consecutive patients with CGVHD and persistent GI symptoms who underwent endoscopic examinations. The diagnosis of CGVHD in these 40 patients was made on the basis of clinical criteria and confirmed by histology of other involved organs in 70%. Patients had progressive (in 19 patients, or 48%), quiescent (in 11, or 27%) or de novo-type (in 10, or 25%) onset of their CGVHD. Four groups were defined based on the following histologic criteria: (1) consistent with acute GI GVHD if there was marked apoptosis with or without
cryptitis
, (2) suggestive of acute GI GVHD if there was scattered apoptosis with or without
cryptitis
, (3) suggestive of chronic GI GVHD if there were at least 2 histologic indicators of chronicity such as fibrosis and significant crypt distortion, and (4) no histologic evidence of GVHD. Results of microbiologic, radiologic, and malabsorption studies, if performed, were also retrieved. Median time from diagnosis of CGVHD to GI endoscopy was 4.5 months (0-109 months). The major GI symptoms at the time of endoscopy were diarrhea,
abdominal pain
/cramping, nausea/vomiting, weight loss, dysphagia, and early satiety. The endoscopic examination was nonspecific for the diagnosis of GI GVHD except for diffuse mucosal sloughing. Based on the histologic criteria in 22 patients with biopsies, 13 cases (59%) were considered to have acute GI GVHD, and 3 cases (14%) were felt to show possible chronic GI GVHD; changes of both acute and chronic GVHD were seen in 6 (27%) cases. GI dysmotility was diagnosed in 7 (18%) patients, including 2 of the patients who had histologic changes suggestive of chronic GVHD. Other causes of the GI symptoms included infection, drug side effect, and malabsorption. In conclusion, GI involvement by acute GVHD appears to be a major cause of persistent GI symptoms in patients with chronic GVHD. An isolated form of chronic GI GVHD confirmed by histology is an uncommon phenomenon in the actual clinical setting.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal involvement in chronic graft-versus-host disease: a clinicopathologic study. 1253 41
A five-year-old boy presented to his family physician with painless swelling of both lips. One year later he developed
abdominal pain
, nonbloody diarrhea, weight loss and joint pains. Colonoscopic examination demonstrated patchy erythema, friability and multiple aph-thous ulcers consistent with the appearance of Crohn's colitis, and treatment with prednisone was initiated. Colonic biopsies displayed a chronic inflammatory cell infiltrate, focal
cryptitis
and fissure formation. The patient's lip swelling relapsed on multiple occasions when steroids were tapered, despite minimal intestinal symptoms of Crohn's disease. The objective of the present report is to alert physicians to this unusual presentation of Crohn's disease and that cheilitis may run a protracted course.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease and cheilitis. 1291 19
We report a case of ulcerative colitis (UC) that occurred during the course of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). A 29-year-old woman with a 25-year history of RA was hospitalized for high fever,
abdominal pain
and hematochezia. Colonoscopy revealed erosive and reddish mucosa from the distal transverse colon to rectum. Histology revealed
cryptitis
(mainly caused by neutrophils), mild crypt abscess and goblet cell depletion. She was diagnosed with left-sided UC and treated with mesalamine enema. The abdominal symptoms and colonoscopic findings were greatly ameliorated. We conclude that the mesalamine enema was effective in this case of UC occurring during the course of RA.
...
PMID:Ulcerative colitis occurring in the course of rheumatoid arthritis: a case successfully treated with mesalamine enema. 1560
The rectal tonsil (RT), a localized reactive proliferation of lymphoid tissue occurring in the rectum, can cause diagnostic difficulty; and awareness of this entity can prevent a misdiagnosis of lymphoma. A clinicopathologic analysis of 11 cases of RT was performed to determine the features that can aid in the recognition of this entity. The patients (6 males and 5 females) were middle-aged adults, except for 1 case affecting a young boy (age range, 1 to 62 y; mean, 49 y). All presented with either rectal bleeding or
abdominal pain
, or had the lesion found on routine screening. Endoscopic descriptions, available in all cases, reported a raised, polypoid lesion in 8 cases, a nodule in 2 cases, and a "mass" in 1 case. Histologically, all cases were composed of a lymphoid proliferation involving the lamina propria or submucosa. Lymphoid follicles could be identified in all cases, although some were difficult to appreciate without immunostains for follicular dendritic cells. Five cases showed overlying
cryptitis
and mild architectural distortion, but no cases showed crypt obliteration or crypt abscesses. Intraepithelial lymphocytes were present in 9 cases, and 5 cases showed nondestructive lymphoepithelial lesions. During a mean follow-up of 5.8 years, none showed a recurrence or developed lymphoma. In conclusion, RT, with its distinctive features, is an important entity to recognize. Familiarity with the range of histologic features characteristic of the RT is critical in avoiding misinterpretation as lymphoma.
...
PMID:The rectal tonsil: a reactive lymphoid proliferation that may mimic lymphoma. 1906 99
A 66-year-old Japanese man consulted our institution due to paroxysmal and repetitive bouts of fever and
abdominal pain
that had persisted for more than one week. Capsule and double-balloon endoscopy (DBE) showed petal-shaped mucosal redness with white hemming in the jejunum and ileum, and histopathology of the biopsy specimens revealed villous atrophy and
cryptitis
with extensive severe neutrophil infiltration. A genetic examination disclosed compound heterozygous MEFV mutations (E84K, P369S), and familial Mediterranean fever was diagnosed. Treatment with colchicine and infliximab was very effective in inducing the complete disappearance of symptoms and normalization of the endoscopic findings. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report to describe the findings of small intestinal endoscopic images obtained using capsule and DBE.
...
PMID:Usefulness of Small Intestinal Endoscopy in a Case of Adult-onset Familial Mediterranean Fever Associated with Jejunoileitis. 2602 84
Patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) are prone to the development of gastrointestinal stromal tumors, which may present clinically with hematochezia, obstruction, or
abdominal pain
. These symptoms are also commonly associated with the presentation of ulcerative colitis (UC). Within the past 5 years, there have been 2 reports of concurrent NF1 and UC and a common pathophysiologic pathway involving mast cells has been postulated. We present the case of a 15-year-old boy with a known history of NF1 who presented with 3 months of hematochezia and loose stools. A colonoscopy revealed pancolitis and histology demonstrating acute
cryptitis
, focal crypt abscesses, and architectural distortion consistent with UC. Due to the paucity of reported cases, the findings of both diseases in the same individual could reasonably be discounted as coincidence. However, in light of increasing reports of concurrent NF1 and UC, advances in characterizing the microenvironment within neurofibromas, and recent findings regarding potential shared genetic susceptibility, it is increasingly possible that the proposed common pathway is accurate. Our case adds to the literature and underscores the need for further investigation.
...
PMID:Concurrent Ulcerative Colitis and Neurofibromatosis Type 1: The Question of a Common Pathway. 2682 41
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