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DEN Open Apr 2024A 69-year-old woman, a long-term survivor of subtotal stomach-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy with the splenic vein resection for pancreatic cancer, visited our...
A 69-year-old woman, a long-term survivor of subtotal stomach-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy with the splenic vein resection for pancreatic cancer, visited our hospital with a chief complaint of bloody stools. Previously, she was diagnosed with varices in the ascending colon due to left-sided portal hypertension after pancreatoduodenectomy by computed tomography and colonoscopy. After emergency hospitalization, she went into shock, and blood tests showed acute progression of severe anemia. Computed tomography showed a mosaic-like fluid accumulation from the ascending colon to the rectum. She was diagnosed with ruptured varices in the ascending colon. Emergency colonoscopy was performed, and treatment with endoscopic injection sclerotherapy using -butyl-2-cyanoacrylate was successful. Ectopic varices occur at any location other than the esophagus and stomach, and colonic varices are rare among them. They are mostly caused by portal hypertension due to liver cirrhosis. However, with the trend of improving the prognosis for patients with pancreatic cancer, we should occasionally pay attention to the development of ectopic varices including colonic varices in patients who have undergone pancreatoduodenectomy with superior mesenteric and splenic veins resection. Treatment methods for colonic varices varied from case to case, including conservative therapy, interventional radiology, and endoscopic procedure. In this case, endoscopic injection sclerotherapy was successfully performed without any complications. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to report successful treatment with endoscopic injection sclerotherapy for varices in the ascending colon caused by left-sided portal hypertension after pancreatoduodenectomy. Colonic varices should be considered in patients with obscure gastrointestinal bleeding after pancreatoduodenectomy.
PubMed: 37441155
DOI: 10.1002/deo2.255 -
PloS One 2022The effect of ageing on total collagen content of human colon has been poorly investigated. The aim of this study was to determine if ageing altered total collagen...
BACKGROUND
The effect of ageing on total collagen content of human colon has been poorly investigated. The aim of this study was to determine if ageing altered total collagen content and distribution in the human colon.
METHODS
Macroscopically normal ascending colon was obtained at surgery from cancer patients (n = 31) without diagnosis of diverticular disease or inflammatory bowel disease. Masson's trichrome and Picrosirius red stains were employed to identify the total collagen content and distribution within the sublayers of the colonic wall for adult (22-60 years; 6 males, 6 females) and elderly (70 - 91years; 6 males, 4 female) patients. A hydroxyproline assay evaluated the total collagen concentration for adult (30-64 years; 9 male, 6 female) and elderly (66-91 years; 8 male, 8 female) patients.
KEY RESULTS
Histological studies showed that the percentage mean intensity of total collagen staining in the mucosa, submucosa and muscularis externa was, respectively, 14(1.9) %, 74(3.2) % and 12(1.5) % in the adult ascending colon. Compared with the adults, the total collagen fibres content was increased in the submucosa (mean intensity; 163.1 ± 11.1 vs. 124.5 ± 7.8; P < 0.05) and muscularis externa (42.5 ± 8.0 vs. 20.6 ± 2.8; P < 0.01) of the elderly patients. There was no change in collagen content of the mucosa. The total collagen concentration was increased in the elderly by 16%. Sex-related differences were not found, and data were combined for analysis.
CONCLUSIONS
Greater total collagen content was found in the submucosa and muscularis externa of the elderly human male and female colon. These changes may contribute to a possible loss of function with ageing.
Topics: Adult; Aged; Aging; Collagen; Colon; Colon, Ascending; Female; Humans; Intestinal Mucosa; Male; Staining and Labeling
PubMed: 35714071
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269689 -
Surgical Case Reports Feb 2019Non-occlusive mesenteric ischemia (NOMI) is a rare and severe pathological condition that can cause intestinal necrosis without mechanical obstruction of the mesenteric...
BACKGROUND
Non-occlusive mesenteric ischemia (NOMI) is a rare and severe pathological condition that can cause intestinal necrosis without mechanical obstruction of the mesenteric artery. NOMI often develops during the treatment of severe disease in elderly patients and mostly occurs in the intestine supplied by the superior mesenteric artery (SMA). We experienced a 12-year-old patient with NOMI that was segmentally localized in the ascending colon and rectum during encephalitis treatment.
CASE PRESENTATION
A 12-year-old boy was hospitalized with limbic encephalitis. On day 41 after admission, he abruptly developed hypotension following diarrhea and fever, and presented abdominal distension. A computed tomography scan revealed pneumatosis intestinalis localized in the ascending colon and rectum coexisting with portal venous gas. The presence of peritoneal signs required an emergency laparotomy. Intraoperatively, skip ischemic lesions were found in the ascending colon and the rectum without bowel perforation. SMA and superior rectal arterial pulsation were present, and the patient was diagnosed with NOMI. The remaining colon, from the transverse to the sigmoid colon, appeared intact. We performed a distal ileostomy without bowel resection. Postoperative colonoscopies were carried out and revealed rectal and ascending colon stenosis with ulceration but demonstrated the patency of the two lesions. We confirmed the improvement of the transient bowel strictures; therefore, the ileal stoma was closed 14 months after the previous laparotomy.
CONCLUSION
NOMI can be present in childhood during encephalitis treatment and can be segmentally localized in the ascending colon and the rectum. Although NOMI is most often seen in elderly patients, we should also consider the possibility of NOMI when pediatric patients with severe illness manifest abdominal symptoms.
PubMed: 30771025
DOI: 10.1186/s40792-019-0592-y -
Current Medical Imaging 2021Ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) are two varieties of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Clinicians need a monitoring technique in the IBD. The disease...
BACKGROUND
Ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) are two varieties of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Clinicians need a monitoring technique in the IBD. The disease activity can be assessed with endoscopy, activity indexes, and imaging techniques. Color Doppler US (CDUS) is also a non-invasive, radiation, and contrast material free examination which shows the intramural blood flow.
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the usefulness of B-mode, CDUS, and a newly developed software Color Quantification (CQ) to determine the activity of the IBD.
METHODS
The disease activity was assessed by clinical activity indexes. Caecum, terminal ileum, ascending colon, transverse colon, and descending colon were evaluated by B-mode, CDUS, and the CQ. Bowel wall thickness (BWT), loss of bowel stratification, loss of haustration, and the presence of enlarged lymph nodes, mesenteric masses, abscesses, fistula, visual vascular signal patterns of the bowel as "hypo and hyper-flow" and the CQ values were investigated. BWT was compared with laboratory results and clinical activities. Vascular signal patterns and the CQ values were compared with BWT and clinical activity. The diagnostic performances of the CQ were investigated.
RESULTS
Fifty-two patients with IBD were evaluated. Patients with increased BWT at the transverse colon had an increased frequency of "hyper-flow" pattern. Clinically active patients had an increased incidence of "hyper-flow" pattern at the terminal ileum, ascending colon, and whole segments. They had increased CQ values at the terminal ileum, ascending colon, and descending colon, and whole segments. A cut-off value for the CQ (24.7%) was obtained at the terminal ileum. In the diagnostic performances of CQ, we observed utilities significantly at the ascending colon, descending colon, terminal ileum, and whole segments. There was a positive correlation between the CQ values and BWT at the caecum, ascending colon, transverse colon, and descending colon.
CONCLUSION
Increased visual vascular signal scores and CQ values might be useful for monitoring the disease activity in patients with IBD.
Topics: Colitis, Ulcerative; Crohn Disease; Humans; Ileum; Inflammatory Bowel Diseases; Ultrasonography, Doppler, Color
PubMed: 33371856
DOI: 10.2174/0929867328666201228124621 -
International Journal of Oncology Jul 2018Developing rapidly from the cecal diverticulum in a 5-week-old embryo, the cecum, which is developed from the caudal limb of the midgut loop, is different from the...
Developing rapidly from the cecal diverticulum in a 5-week-old embryo, the cecum, which is developed from the caudal limb of the midgut loop, is different from the ascending colon. The aim of this study was to analyze the different clinicopathological and biological characteristics of patients with carcinoma of the cecum and ascending colon. We accessed data for 59,035 patients with adenocarcinomas of the cecum and ascending colon from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database to explore the potential associations between the clinicopathological characteristics and overall survival. Furthermore, we analyzed the differences in gene expression between the two segments in the Gene Expression Omnibus database. The results were validated in The Cancer Genome Atlas database, as well as with another independent dataset from the First Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University. The results of this study revealed the potential prognostic differences between adenocarcinoma of the cecum and ascending colon, which may be caused by the differential expression levels of the SLCO1B3 gene. When including the expression levels of SLCO1B3 in intraoperatively examined lymph nodes, 8 factors were found able to predict the prognosis of patients with carcinomas of the cecum and ascending colon. As regards the surgical therapeutic strategies, the resection of >15 local lymph nodes is appropriate for improving the prognosis of patients.
Topics: Adult; Aged; Carcinoma; Cecum; Colon, Ascending; Disease-Free Survival; Female; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Humans; Kaplan-Meier Estimate; Lymph Nodes; Male; Middle Aged; Prognosis; Proteome; Solute Carrier Organic Anion Transporter Family Member 1B3
PubMed: 29658575
DOI: 10.3892/ijo.2018.4366 -
Indian Journal of Pathology &... 2021Lymphomas are hematological malignancies with a wide variety of histological subtypes, varied clinical manifestations and behaviour and have a wide range of organ... (Review)
Review
Lymphomas are hematological malignancies with a wide variety of histological subtypes, varied clinical manifestations and behaviour and have a wide range of organ involvement. About 40 per cent of lymphomas are extra nodal. The most common extra nodal site is gastrointestinal tract (GIT). In the GIT, stomach is the most common organ involved accounting for 50-60 per cent of the lesions. Colorectal lymphomas are rare and account for 15-20 per cent of GIT lymphomas. They constitute 1 per cent of colorectal malignancies. Most common histological type of lymphoma involving GIT is diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, followed by MALT lymphoma; T-cell lymphomas are very rare and have an incidence of 3 per cent of Non Hodgkins Lymphoma (NHL). We report a case of anaplastic large cell lymphoma in the caecum and ascending colon with review of literature.
Topics: Cecum; Colon, Ascending; Colorectal Neoplasms; Drug Therapy; Female; Histological Techniques; Humans; Lymphoma, Large-Cell, Anaplastic; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult
PubMed: 33433433
DOI: 10.4103/IJPM.IJPM_225_19 -
Pharmaceutics Jun 2021For colonic drug delivery, the ascending part of the colon is the most favourable site as it offers the most suitable environmental conditions for drug dissolution....
For colonic drug delivery, the ascending part of the colon is the most favourable site as it offers the most suitable environmental conditions for drug dissolution. Commonly, the performance of a drug formulation is assessed using standardised dissolution apparatus, which does not replicate the hydrodynamics and shear stress evoked by wall motion in the colon. In this work, computer simulations are used to analyse and understand the influence of different biorelevant motility patterns on the disintegration/drug release of a solid dosage form (tablet) under different fluid conditions (viscosities) to mimic the ascending colonic environment. Furthermore, the ability of the motility pattern to distribute the drug in the ascending colon luminal environment is analysed to provide data for a spatiotemporal concentration profile. The motility patterns used are derived from in vivo data representing different motility patterns in the human ascending colon. The applied motility patterns show considerable differences in the drug release rate from the tablet, as well as in the ability to distribute the drug along the colon. The drug dissolution/disintegration process from a solid dosage form is primarily influenced by the hydrodynamic and shear stress it experiences, i.e., a combination of motility pattern and fluid viscosity. Reduced fluid motion leads to a more pronounced influence of diffusion in the tablet dissolution process. The motility pattern that provoked frequent single shear stress peaks seemed to be more effective in achieving a higher drug release rate. The ability to simulate drug release profiles under biorelevant colonic environmental conditions provides valuable feedback to better understand the drug formulation and how this can be optimised to ensure that the drug is present in the desired concentration within the ascending colon.
PubMed: 34200574
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13060859 -
Abdominal Radiology (New York) Nov 2022This study evaluates the prognostic significance of EMVI and DEMI on preoperative CT in patients with ascending colon cancer.
PURPOSE
This study evaluates the prognostic significance of EMVI and DEMI on preoperative CT in patients with ascending colon cancer.
METHODS
This retrospective study included consecutive patients with T3 ascending colon cancer from January 2012 to December 2016 in a tertiary center. Two radiologists independently reviewed EMVI, DEMI, and nodal status on preoperative CT. We assessed the association of age, sex, mucinous adenocarcinoma, EMVI, and DEMI with metastasis on preoperative CT using univariable and multivariable analysis. We also compared disease-free survival (DFS) with and without variables (age, sex, mucinous adenocarcinoma, EMVI, DEMI and adjuvant chemotherapy) using Cox's proportional hazards models. We assessed interobserver agreements on imaging features using the Cohen's weighted kappa.
RESULTS
Of 237 patients [107 men; mean (standard deviation) age, 66 (13) years], 24 had metastases on preoperative CT. Positive EMVI was associated with metastasis (odds ratio 16.9; P < 0.001) on multivariable analysis. Of 194 patients [83 men; 65 (13) years] included for DFS analysis, recurrence was observed in 31 (16%) with median follow-up of 53 months. Positive EMVI [hazard ratio (HR) 4.8; P < 0.001] and DEMI > 5 mm (HR 5.5; P < 0.001) were associated with worse DFS. Interobserver agreements were good (kappa = 0.64-0.67).
CONCLUSION
Positive EMVI and DEMI > 5 mm on preoperative CT were associated with a worse T3 ascending colon cancer prognosis. Thus, these CT findings could be used as imaging biomarkers for T3 ascending colon cancer risk stratification.
Topics: Adenocarcinoma, Mucinous; Aged; Colon, Ascending; Colonic Neoplasms; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Neoplasm Invasiveness; Neoplasm Staging; Prognosis; Rectal Neoplasms; Retrospective Studies; Tomography, X-Ray Computed
PubMed: 36066635
DOI: 10.1007/s00261-022-03657-4 -
Annals of Medicine and Surgery (2012) May 2024Tuberculosis (TB) has been one of the most devastating diseases to humanity in recent decades; although pulmonary infection is the most common, infection of any other...
INTRODUCTION AND IMPORTANCE
Tuberculosis (TB) has been one of the most devastating diseases to humanity in recent decades; although pulmonary infection is the most common, infection of any other organ is familiar as well. Colon cancer is another disease affecting the gastrointestinal (GI) system and mostly targets people over 50. Only a few studies mentioned the co-existence of cancer and TB occurring at the same place and time. Hence, the authors report a rare case of concurrent ascending colon adenocarcinoma and colonic TB.
CASE PRESENTATION
A 49 -year-old man presented to our clinic with constipation and abdominal pain. Two colonoscopies were performed, and two biopsies were taken; the first one showed granulomatous inflammation consistent with TB, and the second one showed low-grade adenocarcinoma. Computed tomography showed annular thickening of the ascending colon with infiltrates around the lesions. A right hemicolectomy was performed, and the final pathology confirmed adenocarcinoma grade II and extensive TB granulomas involving the colon into the serosa and the lymph nodes. Anti-TB medications were administered after surgery.
CLINICAL DISCUSSION
Due to appropriate diagnostic methods, TB and cancer were detected at an early stage. In our treatment protocol, no adjuvant chemotherapy was applied after surgery due to the possibility of drug interaction with anti-TB medications.
CONCLUSION
The two diseases may co-exist; thus, diagnosing them may not be the easiest, not to mention the lack of a clear treatment protocol in case of their accompany.
PubMed: 38694366
DOI: 10.1097/MS9.0000000000001927 -
Arab Journal of Gastroenterology : the... Jun 2021Non-pedunculated lesions are easily missed on endoscopy, and histopathological examination shows that some of these lesions are adenomas. Adenoma is a precursor of...
BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS
Non-pedunculated lesions are easily missed on endoscopy, and histopathological examination shows that some of these lesions are adenomas. Adenoma is a precursor of colorectal cancer, a common tumor of the digestive tract. This study was conducted to compare the detection efficacy of non-pedunculated lesions in the same patient under different modes of blue laser endoscopy and to determine whether the surface pattern of the sample was consistent with its histopathological results.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
A total of 91 patients with non-pedunculated lesions diagnosed at our hospital between April 2018 and March 2019 were included in this study. White light imaging (WLI), linked color imaging (LCI), and blue laser imaging (BLI) modes were used to record the location, number, and Hiroshima classification of the surface patterns of the non-pedunculated lesions. The lesions were removed by different endoscopic excision methods for histopathological examination; the histopathological results were compared with the surface patterns.
RESULTS
A total of 105, 198, and 223 lesions were detected using the WLI, BLI, and LCI modes, respectively. The Wilcoxon signed rank test revealed a significant difference in the number of lesions detected using each observation mode (p < 0.01). The non-pedunculated lesions were primarily located in the rectum and transverse colon, followed by the sigmoid, descending, and ascending colon. The efficacy of LCI and BLI modes was better than that of WLI mode for detecting the non-pedunculated lesions measuring < 5 mm in size (p < 0.05). The surface pattern was not detected by the WLI mode. The surface patterns detected using the LCI and BLI modes were primarily types A and B. Histopathological results of the non-pedunculated lesions included inflammatory polyp, hyperplastic polyp, tubular adenoma, and adenoma. Surface patterns could not be detected using the WLI mode. The McNemar's test revealed a significant difference between the WLI mode findings and the histopathological results (p < 0.01). No significant difference was observed between the histopathological results and the surface patterns detected using the LCI mode (kappa = 0.57); the agreement was poor. There was also no significant difference between the histopathological results and the surface patterns detected using the BLI mode (kappa test, p < 0.01; kappa = 0.88); hence, there was good agreement between the surface patterns detected using the BLI mode and the histopathological results.
CONCLUSION
The detection rate of colorectal non-pedunculated lesions may be improved using blue laser endoscopy. Non-pedunculated colorectal adenomas could be identified more accurately using the BLI mode, which might improve the adenoma detection rate, thus indicating that BLI is a feasible option in the practical settings.
Topics: Adenoma; Colon, Ascending; Colonoscopy; Colorectal Neoplasms; Humans; Lasers
PubMed: 33736947
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajg.2020.12.002