| Literature DB >> 21160727 |
Roongruedee Chaiteerakij1, Rungsun Rerknimitr, Pinit Kullavanijaya.
Abstract
Endoscopy is a widely used diagnostic tool to detect reflux esophagitis. Although its specificity was reported to be excellent at 90%-95%, its sensitivity was only 50%. Therefore, it is quite difficult to detect these lesions under the standard white light endoscopy especially in patients with minimal change esophageal reflux disease (MERD). In recent years, endoscopic technologies have evolved tremendously; these include high resolution and magnification digital chromoendoscopy. These technologies are useful practically for detecting various subtle lesions along the gastrointestinal tract starting from esophagus to colon. Currently, these technologies can be classified in 2 systems; pre-processed system (NBI, Olympus) and post processed system (FICE and i-SCAN, Fujinon and Pentax respectively). Over a few years, there have been many emerging publications on the benefit of these systems on MERD detection. The overall sensitivities to diagnose MERD were reported as much better than controls. However, large, multi-center and randomized controlled studies comparing these new imaging modalities with the conventional white light chromoendoscopy are warranted to validate its accuracy. Standard, simple and precise endoscopic reading criteria for the identification of MERD are also required.Entities:
Keywords: Chromoendoscopy; Diagnosis; Digital; Erosive reflux esophagitis; Minimal change; Post processed; Pre-processed
Year: 2010 PMID: 21160727 PMCID: PMC2999168 DOI: 10.4253/wjge.v2.i4.121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastrointest Endosc