Submucosal fat accumulation in Crohn's disease: evaluation with sonography.

IF 3.4 Q2 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY
Tomás Ripollés, María Jesús Martínez-Pérez, José María Paredes, José Vizuete, Gregorio Martin, Lidia Navarro
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Abstract

Background/aims: The study objective is to investigate the ultrasound features that allow suspecting the presence of submucosal fat deposition, called the fat halo sign (FHS), in the intestinal wall of patients with Crohn's disease.

Methods: Computed tomography (CT) examinations over a period of 10 years were reviewed for the presence of the FHS in the bowel wall. A measurement of less than -10 Hounsfield units was regarded as indicative of fat. We included only patients who had undergone ultrasound examinations 3 months before or after CT. The study cohort group comprised 68 patients. Wall and submucosal thickness were measured on longitudinal ultrasound sections. A receiver operating characteristic curve was constructed to determine the best cutoff of ultrasound submucosal wall thickness value for predicting FHS in the bowel wall determined on CT.

Results: The FHS was present in 22 patients (31%) on CT. There were significant differences between submucosal thickness of patients with FHS and patients without FHS (4.19 mm vs. 2.41 mm). From the receiver operating characteristic curve, a threshold value of 3.1 mm of submucosal thickness had the best sensitivity and specificity to suspect FHS (95.5% and 89.1%, respectively; area under the curve, 0.962), with an odds ratio of 172. All of 16 patients with a submucosal thickness >3.9 mm had FHS.

Conclusions: FHS in patients with Crohn's disease can be suspected on ultrasound in cases with marked thickening of the submucosa layer. In these cases, the activity of the disease should be measured by other parameters such as the color Doppler.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

克罗恩病粘膜下脂肪堆积:超声评价。
背景/目的:本研究的目的是探讨克罗恩病患者肠壁中是否存在粘膜下脂肪沉积的超声特征,即脂肪晕征(FHS)。方法:回顾了10年来肠壁中FHS的CT检查结果。低于-10霍斯菲尔德单位的测量被认为是脂肪的指示。我们只纳入了在CT前后3个月接受过超声检查的患者。研究队列组包括68例患者。纵向超声切片测量粘膜壁和粘膜下厚度。构建受者工作特征曲线,以确定超声粘膜下壁厚度值的最佳截止值,用于预测CT确定的肠壁FHS。结果:22例(31%)患者CT表现为FHS。FHS患者与非FHS患者的粘膜下厚度差异有统计学意义(4.19 mm vs. 2.41 mm)。从受试者工作特征曲线来看,3.1 mm的粘膜下厚度阈值对疑似FHS的敏感性和特异性最好(分别为95.5%和89.1%);曲线下面积为0.962),比值比为172。16例粘膜下厚度>3.9 mm的患者均为FHS。结论:克罗恩病患者粘膜下层明显增厚,超声检查可怀疑为FHS。在这种情况下,疾病的活动性应通过其他参数来测量,如彩色多普勒。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Intestinal Research
Intestinal Research GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY-
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
10.20%
发文量
69
审稿时长
38 weeks
期刊介绍: Intestinal Research (Intest Res) is the joint official publication of the Asian Organization for Crohn''s and Colitis (AOCC), Chinese Society of IBD (CSIBD), Japanese Society for IBD (JSIBD), Korean Association for the Study of Intestinal Diseases (KASID), Taiwan Society of IBD (TSIBD) and Colitis Crohn''s Foundation (India) (CCF, india). The aim of the Journal is to provide broad and in-depth analysis of intestinal diseases, especially inflammatory bowel disease, which shows increasing tendency and significance. As a Journal specialized in clinical and translational research in gastroenterology, it encompasses multiple aspects of diseases originated from the small and large intestines. The Journal also seeks to propagate and exchange useful innovations, both in ideas and in practice, within the research community. As a mode of scholarly communication, it encourages scientific investigation through the rigorous peer-review system and constitutes a qualified and continual platform for sharing studies of researchers and practitioners. Specifically, the Journal presents up-to-date coverage of medical researches on the physiology, epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical presentations, and therapeutic interventions of the intestinal diseases. General topics of interest include inflammatory bowel disease, colon and small intestine cancer or polyp, endoscopy, irritable bowel syndrome and other motility disorders, infectious enterocolitis, intestinal tuberculosis, and so forth. The Journal publishes diverse types of academic materials such as editorials, clinical and basic reviews, original articles, case reports, letters to the editor, brief communications, perspective, statement or commentary, and images that are useful to clinicians and researchers.
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