Contents Menu

Matsunaga Naofumi

Affiliate Master Yamaguchi University

Utility of CT enteroclysis for small intestinal hemorrhage

The bulletin of the Yamaguchi Medical School Volume 58 Issue 1-2 Page 11-18
published_at 2011
A050058000103.pdf
[fulltext] 2.03 MB
Title
Utility of CT enteroclysis for small intestinal hemorrhage
Creators Washida Yasuo
Creators Shimizu Kensaku
Creators Kobayashi Taiga
Creators Kishi Takayuki
Creators Ueda Takaaki
Creators Katoh Masatoshi
Creators Onoda Hideko
Creators Fujita Takeshi
Creators Matsunaga Naofumi
Source Identifiers
Creator Keywords
CT enteroclysis double balloon endoscopy capsule endocscopy obscure gastrointestinal bleeding
Purpose : To examine the utility and limitations of computed tomography enteroclysis (CTE) in examining clinically suspected small intestinal hemorrhage.Subjects and Methods : Subjects comprised 41 patients (16 men, 25 women) with suspected gastrointestinal bleeding based on fecal occult blood or tarry stool between April 2008 and August 2010. CTE was performed after the cause of bleeding could not be clearly identified on upper or lower gastrointestinal endoscopy. Capsule endoscopy was also performed in 25 patients and double balloon endoscopy in 13 patients. Results : CTE findings were obtained for 17 of 41 patients (41%), suggesting vascular malformation in 9 patients (22%), inflammatory bowel disease in 7 (17%), and small intestinal tumor in 1 (2%). Capsule endoscopy or double balloon endoscopy confirmed these suspicions in all except 1 patient with angiodysplasia confirmed angiographically and 1 patient with a false-positive finding of tumor. In 20 of the 24 patients showing no abnormalities on CTE, no obvious source of bleeding was found with capsule endoscopy or double balloon endoscopy.Conclusion : CTE can successfully detect a wide variety of lesions, including not only Crohn’s disease and vascular malformations, but also drug-induced small intestinal injury, small intestinal tuberculosis, and nontuberculous mycobacteriosis.
Languages eng
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publishers Yamaguchi University School of Medicine
Date Issued 2011
File Version Version of Record
Access Rights open access