The reliability of abdominal computed tomography (CT) in the assessment of varying degrees of small bowel obstruction (SBO) was evaluated by using results at enteroclysis and clinical outcome as standards of reference. A blinded retrospective analysis was performed of the studies of 55 patients who underwent both CT and enteroclysis in the course of assessment for suspected SBO. Nine patients had no obstruction, 40 patients had obstruction due to adhesions, and six patients had tumor-related obstruction. CT results were used to identify correctly 63% (29 of 46) of those who had SBO and 78% (seven of nine) of the patients who did not. The overall accuracy of the CT interpretations to help establish diagnosis was 65% (36 of 55). When obstructions were classified into low- and high-grade partial obstruction, CT results could be used to identify correctly 81% (17 of 21) of high-grade SBOs and 48% (12 of 25) of low-grade SBOs. The procedure yielded two false-positive and 13 false-negative results for patients with low-grade obstruction, revealed masses in all six cases with tumor-related obstruction, and helped predict the correct cause in all true-positive cases.
The accuracy and clinical relevance of enteroclysis in the evaluation of 138 patients referred for enteroclysis for suspected Crohn disease of the small intestine are reported. The original prospective interpretations of enteroclysis results were assessed after a clinical follow-up period of 2 or more years. With all patients considered, enteroclysis had a sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 100%, 98.3%, and 99.3%, respectively, with only one false-positive diagnosis and no false-negative diagnoses. Thirty-one percent (n = 43) of the patients had lesions of early Crohn disease. All patients who required surgery (n = 23) had advanced lesions of the disease, according to enteroclysis criteria. Clinical evidence of Crohn disease did not develop in the 58 patients in whom enteroclysis revealed no abnormality. There were no complications related to the procedure. It is concluded that enteroclysis is an accurate method for diagnosis and exclusion of Crohn disease of the small intestine and provides detailed structural information relevant to appropriate management of the disease.
Of 519 consecutive patients examined by enteroclysis, 12 (2.3%) were found to have acquired diverticula of the jejunum and ileum. All except one patient had multiple diverticula, most occurring in the jejunum. In only one patient could symptoms be ascribed to the abnormality. The combination of intraluminal distention and extrinsic abdominal compression provided by the enteroclysis technique appears to be the most reliable method for the demonstration of small-bowel diverticula. A discussion of the complications that may result from acquired jejunoileal diverticulosis and a review of the literature are presented.
The thoughtful selection of patients by clinicians for small bowel radiography is essential to make radiologic evaluation cost effective. The incidence of disease of the small intestine is low and is associated with nonspecific symptoms. Because of the inherent difficulty of visualizing numerous loops of an actively peristalsing bowel, a reliable imaging method is needed that not only detects small or early structural abnormality but also accurately documents normalcy. The yield of information provided by enteroclysis and its high negative predictive value suggests that it should be the primary method for small bowel examination. The "overhead"-based conventional small bowel follow-through should be abandoned. The "fluoroscopy"-based small bowel follow-through augmented when necessary by the peroral pneumocolon or the gas-enhanced double-contrast follow-through method is an acceptable alternative when enteroclysis is not possible.
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