| Literature DB >> 29017297 |
Thomas Klag1, Jan Wehkamp1, Martin Goetz1.
Abstract
Management of intestinal strictures associated with Crohn's disease (CD) is clinically challenging despite advanced medical therapy directed toward mucosal healing to positively influence the natural course of CD-associated complications. Although medical therapy is available for inflammatory strictures, therapy of fibrostenotic strictures is the domain of surgery and endoscopy. Endoscopic balloon dilation (EBD) has been recognized as a well-established first-line procedure in terms of safety and efficacy. Although surgery is a valuable treatment modality for the management of CD-related strictures, EBD can help prevent multiple surgical interventions, which might in the long-term lead to a risk of short bowel syndrome. In this review we discuss requirements, techniques, safety, short- and long-term outcomes, as well as combinations of this procedure with surgical and medical treatment in CD-associated intestinal strictures.Entities:
Keywords: Balloon dilation; Constriction, pathologic; Crohn’s disease; Stenosis; Stricture
Year: 2017 PMID: 29017297 PMCID: PMC5642070 DOI: 10.5946/ce.2017.147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endosc ISSN: 2234-2400
Fig. 1.Antegrade balloon dilation (from left to right). A balloon is gently introduced into the stricture followed by hydrostatic dilation.
Fig. 2.A segment of short stenosis is delineated using injection of contrast via a catheter (arrow). Note the endoscope is in a torqued position secondary to postoperative adhesions. A balloon is advanced over a wire and carefully inflated until the indentation subsides.
Safety Requirements in Order to Avoid Complications of Endoscopic Balloon Dilation in Crohn’s Disease
| 1 | The endoscopist and the team should be well trained |
| 2 | Plan endoscopic balloon dilation in an elective setting, if possible |
| 3 | Consider discontinuation or switch of anticoagulation |
| 4 | Screen for cardio-vascular or pulmonary high risk patients regarding sedation |
| 5 | Thrive for excellent bowel preparation |
| 6 | Persist on imaging and previous patient data regarding abscess, fistula, inflammatory aspect of stricture and bowel anatomy |
| 7 | Use carbon dioxide (or insufflate as little air as possible) |
| 8 | Do not force the balloon across a stricture in a blind fashion—use wire guided, contrast assisted or retrograde dilatation instead |
| 9 | Do not dilate too aggressively (Do not “over-dilate”, rather schedule two sessions for step-wise dilatation) |
| 10 | If complications are suspected aim for immediate diagnosis and treatment (e.g., clip application etc.) |
| 11 | If complications are suspected, patients should stay on liquid diet for about 48 hours after intervention (second look endoscopy or surgery may be required) |
Own experiences and partly Adapted from Chen et al. [12]
Fig. 3.(A) A suppurative fistula observed at the site of stenosis necessitated medical therapy and balloon dilatation. (B) Four months after dilation, discharge from the fistula is observed to have subsided.
Fig. 4.A site of jejunal stenosis is accessed using single-balloon endoscopy. (A) A guide wire is inserted across the stenosis. (B) A wire-guided balloon is positioned within the stenosis. (C) Water (or contrast)-filled balloons allow direct visual control during dilatation. (D) The stenosis is sufficiently dilated. A second narrowing, which was subsequently dilated is visible distal to the stenosis.
Fig. 5.Histologically confirmed low-grade intestinal neoplasia is observed at the site of a Crohn’s disease-associated stenosis (noted at the 4–5 o’clock position).