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To identify the role of enteroscopy in diagnosis and treatment of small intestinal diseases.
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The small bowel is vital for digestion and absorption and is located between the stomach and large bowel. Because of its anatomical position, the small bowel was originally thought to be a "blind area" beyond the reach of ordinary endoscopic examination, leading to difficulty in diagnosing smallbowel disease.
Diseases that affect the intestinal wall are called enteropathies and can be associated with chronic diarrhea, which clinically presents in that group of patients as malabsorption syndrome and can be divided into:
For detecting neoplastic and inflammatory diseases, endoscopy is a powerful tool. However, the diagnostic yield of a routine colonoscopy examination has been reported to be as low as 15%-30% even when an appropriate histopathological examination is added with multiple biopsy specimens.
Capsule endoscopy is an innovative method for diagnosing smallbowel disease. The reported positivity rate of capsule endoscopy for diagnosing smallbowel disease is approximately 45-81% with an accuracy rate of approximately 20-30%. However, biopsy is not possible using this approach, the precise lesion location cannot be determined, and endoscopic therapy is not possible, which limit its use.
Doubleballoon enteroscopy partly overcomes the deficiencies of capsule endoscopy, enabling examination of the entire small bowel while making biopsy and therapy possible as in stenosis dilation, extracting retained capsule endoscopy, and controlling bleeding.
The diagnostic rate of doubleballoon enteroscopy for smallbowel disease ranges from 82.4% to 86.8%.
Obtaining multiple biopsy samples from gastrointestinal mucosa is important for the diagnosis of microscopic colitis, amyloidosis, eosinophilic gastroenteritis, and celiac disease since an endoscopic examination is not sensitive enough to detect characteristic findings associated with these diseases.
Approximately 0.3-10% of individuals with celiac disease (CD) will develop refractory CD (RCD), which is associated with pre-malignant/malignant lesions which can affect anywhere along the length of the small intestine such as ulcerative jejunitis and enteropathy associated T cell lymphoma (EATL). Therefore, endoscopic evaluation of the entire length of the small bowel is essential.
Over 95% of the patients with eosinophilic gastroenteritis (EGE) reportedly have detectable endoscopic abnormalities such as multiple erosions with surrounding redness so the diagnosis of EGE is based on symptoms and eosinophilic infiltration of tissues, and a biopsy with a balloon endoscope is necessary to evaluate the histology of the small intestine.
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Inclusion criteria
• All patients will undergo gastroscopy, colonoscopy, abdominal computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging, or radionuclide examination without a clear diagnosis will be subjected to enteroscopy including:
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Maiada Ibrahim
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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