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Query: UMLS:C0009319 (
colitis
)
19,384
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) may cause damage to the colon, either inducing a non-specific
colitis
or exacerbating
colonic diverticulitis
or inflammatory bowel disease. Symptoms of NSAID-induced
colitis
include abdominal pain, bloody diarrhoea and weight loss. Colonoscopy may show non-specific inflammation, ulceration or diaphragm-like stricture. As the mechanism of toxicity is still controversial, management should be to discontinue the drug, treat medically with metronidazole or sulphasalazine, and, in cases of life-threatening complications, treat surgically.
...
PMID:Toxicity of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in the large bowel. 1032 54
Patients with acute abdominal pain are a great challenge to the radiologist. The clinical diagnosis is classically unreliable, resulting in both negative laparotomies as well as ill-advised surgical delay in a large number of patients. Ultrasound offers a non-invasive way to decrease both false-negative and false-positive diagnoses in this category of patients. This article focuses on the role of sonography in the diagnosis of acute conditions of the gastrointestinal tract tract such as appendicitis, sigmoid diverticulitis, Crohn's disease,
colitis
, infectious ileocecitis caused by Yersinia, Campylobacter or Salmonella, right-sided
colonic diverticulitis
, bowel malignancy presenting acutely, small bowel obstruction, intussusception, omental infarction, and epiploic appendagitis. The sonographic spectrum of these conditions as well as possible pitfalls are discussed using illustrative case histories.
...
PMID:Ultrasound of acute GI tract conditions. 1170 19
The diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for detection of intestinal fistulas, other than perianal, in patients with known complicated inflammatory bowel conditions (CIBC) was investigated. Our study group consisted of 20 patients (12 women, mean age 43 years) with CIBC, including Crohn's disease (n=13),
colonic diverticulitis
(n=3),
colitis
after radiotherapy (n=3) and of postoperative origin (n=1). Eleven surgically proven enteral fistulas were known in ten (50%) of these patients, being of enterovesical (n=3), enterocolic (n=2), enteroenteral (n=2), rectovaginal (n=2), rectovaginovesical (n=1) and of entercutaneous (n=1) localisation. The other ten patients (50%), used as the control group, showed MR features of CIBC, although without any fistulous tract. Multiplanar T1- and T2-weighted sequences had been performed, including gadolinium-enhanced acquisition with fat saturation (1.5 T). MR findings were independently blindly and retrospectively reviewed by three radiologists for the presence and etiology of any fistula, as well as visualization and characterization of the fistulous tract. Results were compared with surgical findings (n=16) and clinical evolution (n=4). Interobserver agreement was calculated. Interobserver agreement kappa for fistula detection was 0.71. Overall sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for fistula detection were 78.6%, 75% and 77.2%, respectively. Sensitivity for fistula characterization was 80.6%, with visualization of the fistulous tract in all cases, whereby T1-weighted gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated images were considered the most useful sequences. Gadolinium-enhanced MRI is a reliable and reproducible tool for detection of enteral fistulas secondary to inflammatory conditions.
...
PMID:Diagnostic performance of MRI for detection of intestinal fistulas in patients with complicated inflammatory bowel conditions. 1749 88
Filiform polyposis (FP) of the colon is an uncommon entity that is occasionally encountered in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). FP is morphologically characterized by multiple slender worm-like projections consisting of submucosal cores lined with normal mucosa. To date, only two cases of FP have been reported in patients with inflammatory conditions of the gastrointestinal tract other than ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. We report an additional case of FP occurring in an 83-year-old man with no history of IBD. The patient underwent anterior resection of the sigmoid colon for perforated diverticulitis. Around the diverticular orifice, localized FP involving a 13-cm colonic segment was observed. The filiform polyps consisted of submucosal fibrovascular cores lined with normal mucosa without epithelial dysplasia. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of FP associated with
colonic diverticulitis
in a patient without IBD.
J Crohns
Colitis
2010 Dec
PMID:Filiform polyposis associated with sigmoid diverticulitis in a patient without inflammatory bowel disease. 2112 79
Diverticular disease is a common condition that is associated with variable presentations. For this review article, we performed a review of articles in PubMed through February 1, 2016, by using the following MeSH terms: colon diverticula,
colonic diverticulitis
, colonic diverticulosis, colonic diverticulum, colonic diverticula, and diverticula. Diverticula are structural alterations within the colonic wall that classically form "pockets" referred to as diverticula. Diverticula form from herniation of the colonic mucosa and submucosa through defects in the circular muscle layers within the colonic wall. Often this is at the sites of penetrating blood vessels in the colon. Diverticular disease is extremely common, which resulted in 2,682,168 outpatient visits and 283,355 hospitalization discharges for diverticulitis or diverticulosis in 2009. Diverticulosis is one of the most common detected conditions found incidentally on colonoscopy. Risk factors for the development of diverticulitis include obesity, smoking, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, corticosteroids, and opiates. In contrast, fiber may be protective, but recent studies have questioned the role of fiber in developing diverticular disease. Most patients with diverticulosis will be asymptomatic, but a subset of patients may develop nonspecific abdominal pain (isolated or recurrent), diverticulitis, or segmental
colitis
associated with diverticulosis. Classically, the treatment of diverticulitis has included antibiotics for all patients. More recent evidence indicates that in mild to even moderate uncomplicated diverticulitis, antibiotics may not be as necessary as initially believed. In more complicated diverticulitis, intravenous antibiotics and surgery may be necessary. Once a patient has had an attack of diverticulitis, increasing fiber may help prevent future attacks. Other modalities such as 5-aminosalicylate products, antibiotics, and probiotics are still of unclear benefit in preventing future episodes of diverticulitis. Similarly, even when patients develop recurrent episodes of diverticulitis, surgery may not be necessary as a prophylactic treatment.
...
PMID:Diverticulosis and Diverticulitis. 2781 42