Literature DB >> 22434936

Colorectal stents orient specimens and induce artifacts that mimic Crohn disease.

Nima Amini1, Dana Haydel, Niloufar Reisian, Geoffrey Sempa, Julia Chu, Qun Wang, Guohua Zhao, Michael J Stamos, Mark Li-cheng Wu.   

Abstract

Colorectal malignancies may be stented to alleviate obstruction. The stent is a polarized and braided network of metallic wires. Pathology associated with colorectal stents is yet to be described. The authors reviewed 7 cases involving stented colorectal segments from patients lacking clinical suspicion of Crohn disease. In 4 cases, orientation of the specimens and stents matched the corresponding anatomic landmarks. In 3 cases, the specimens lacked helpful anatomic landmarks, and orientation was possible only after correlating with the intrinsic polarity of the stents. Stented areas showed artifacts resembling Crohn disease, including rounded cobblestones, pseudopolyps, and simple fissures, as well as unique artifacts including rhomboid cobblestones, complex fissures, oblique fissures with remarkably straight edges, and conical fragments of tissue that appeared to float. Crohn disease was misdiagnosed in 1 case in which the stent was removed intraoperatively and was never received. Colorectal stents help orient ambiguous specimens and induce patterned injury that can be confused with Crohn disease.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22434936     DOI: 10.1177/1066896912437413

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Surg Pathol        ISSN: 1066-8969            Impact factor:   1.271


  1 in total

1.  Colonic stent-induced mechanical compression may suppress cancer cell proliferation in malignant large bowel obstruction.

Authors:  Akihisa Matsuda; Masao Miyashita; Satoshi Matsumoto; Nobuyuki Sakurazawa; Youichi Kawano; Kazuya Yamahatsu; Kumiko Sekiguchi; Marina Yamada; Tsutomu Hatori; Hiroshi Yoshida
Journal:  Surg Endosc       Date:  2018-08-31       Impact factor: 4.584

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.