Inflammatory bowel diseases
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Inflamm. Bowel Dis. · Apr 2013
Comparative StudyCT enterography in evaluating postoperative recurrence of Crohn's disease after ileocolic resection: complementary role to endoscopy.
Ileocolonoscopy is the gold standard to assess postoperative recurrence (POR) in patients with Crohn's disease (CD) who have undergone ileocolic resection. Although computed tomographic enterography (CTE) yields striking findings in the small bowel of CD, its role in POR is undefined. The aim of this study was to compare ileocolonoscopy and CTE for evaluating POR in CD. ⋯ CTE is a reliable method in assessing POR in patients with CD who have undergone ileocolic resection. CTE may serve as an important complementary tool to endoscopy for evaluation of the postoperative course of CD.
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Inflamm. Bowel Dis. · Apr 2013
Matrix stiffness corresponding to strictured bowel induces a fibrogenic response in human colonic fibroblasts.
Crohn's disease is characterized by repeated cycles of inflammation and mucosal healing which ultimately progress to intestinal fibrosis. This inexorable progression toward fibrosis suggests that fibrosis becomes inflammation-independent and auto-propagative. We hypothesized that matrix stiffness regulates this auto-propagation of intestinal fibrosis. ⋯ Matrix stiffness, representative of the pathologic stiffness of Crohn's strictures, activates human colonic fibroblasts to a fibrogenic phenotype. Matrix stiffness affects multiple pathways, suggesting that the mechanical properties of the cellular environment are critical to fibroblast function and may contribute to auto-propagation of intestinal fibrosis in the absence of inflammation, thereby contributing to the intractable intestinal fibrosis characteristic of Crohn's disease.