- Colorectal neoplasia
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Topographic, histological and molecular study of aberrant crypt foci identified in human colon in different clinical groups
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Shouriyo Ghosh, Brijnandan Gupta, Pavan Verma, Sreenivas Vishnubathla, Sujoy Pal, Nihar R Dash, Siddhartha Datta Gupta, Prasenjit Das
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Intest Res 2018;16(1):116-125. Published online January 18, 2018
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5217/ir.2018.16.1.116
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Abstract
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- Background/Aims
Aberrant crypt foci (ACF) are early microscopic lesions of the colonic mucosa, which can be detected by magnified chromoendoscopy. Herein, we have investigated whether ACF identified in different clinical groups can be differentiated based on their characteristics. MethodsMacroscopically unremarkable mucosal flaps were collected from 270 fresh colectomies and divided into 3 clinical groups: colorectal carcinoma (group A), disease controls having known pre-neoplastic potential (group Bc), and disease controls without risk of carcinoma development (group Bn). Topographic and histologic analysis, immunohistochemistry, and molecular studies (high-resolution melt curve analysis, real-time polymerase chain reaction, and Sanger sequencing) were conducted for certain neoplasia-associated markers. ResultsACF were seen in 107 cases, out of which 72 were left colonic ACF and 35 right colonic ACF (67.2% vs. 32.7%, P=0.02). The overall density of left colonic ACF was 0.97/cm, which was greater than the right colonic ACF density of 0.81/cm. Hypercrinia was present in 41 out of 72 left colonic ACF and in 14 out of 35 right colonic ACF (P=0.01). Immunohistochemical expression of p53 was also greater in left colonic ACF than in right colonic ACF (60.5% vs. 38.2%, P=0.03). However, ACF identified among the 3 clinical groups did not show any distinguishing topographic, histological, or genetic changes. ConclusionsLeft colonic ACF appear to be high-risk based on their morphological and prototypic tumor marker signature. ACF identified in different clinical groups do not show significant genotypic or topographic differences. Further detailed genetic studies are required to elucidate them further.
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- Methylation study of tumor suppressor genes in human aberrant crypt foci, colorectal carcinomas, and normal colon
Jayati Sarangi, Prasenjit Das, Aijaz Ahmad, Mohamed Sulaiman, Shouriyo Ghosh, Brijnandan Gupta, Rajesh Panwar, Sujoy Pal, Rajni Yadav, Vineet Ahuja, Sudip Sen, Asish D. Upadhyay, Nihar R. Dash, Atul Sharma, Siddhartha D. Gupta Journal of Cancer Research and Therapeutics.2024; 20(1): 268. CrossRef
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- IBD
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Are Truelove and Witts criteria for diagnosing acute severe colitis relevant for the Indian population? A prospective study
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Saransh Jain, Saurabh Kedia, Sawan Bopanna, Dawesh P Yadav, Sandeep Goyal, Peush Sahni, Sujoy Pal, Nihar Ranjan Dash, Govind Makharia, Simon P. L. Travis, Vineet Ahuja
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Intest Res 2018;16(1):69-74. Published online January 18, 2018
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5217/ir.2018.16.1.69
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Abstract
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- Background/Aims
Truelove and Witts criteria have been used to define acute severe colitis since the 1950s. However, hemoglobin (an additional criterion of the definition) levels in the general population in developing countries are lower than in the population of developed countries. We aimed to determine the relevance of Truelove and Witts criteria in the Indian population. MethodsConsecutive patients with acute severe colitis satisfying the Truelove and Witts criteria, hospitalized at a single center between April 2015 and December 2016 were included. All patients received intravenous corticosteroids and 16 required colectomy. The hemoglobin levels at admission were subsequently excluded from the classification criteria, and the effect this had on the criteria for diagnosis was determined. ResultsOut of 61 patients of acute severe colitis diagnosed according to the original Truelove and Witts criteria, 12 patients (20%) had 1 additional criterion, 33 (54%) had 2 additional criteria and 16 (26%) had 3 or more additional criteria in addition to 6 or more blood stained stools on admission. On excluding hemoglobin as an additional criterion from the Truelove and Witts definition, all patients still met the criteria for acute severe colitis. ConclusionsTruelove and Witts criteria can be used to define acute severe colitis in India, despite lower mean hemoglobin in the native population.
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8,745
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Predictive factors for malignancy in undiagnosed isolated small bowel strictures
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Ujjwal Sonika, Sujeet Saha, Saurabh Kedia, Nihar Ranjan Dash, Sujoy Pal, Prasenjit Das, Vineet Ahuja, Peush Sahni
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Intest Res 2017;15(4):518-523. Published online October 23, 2017
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5217/ir.2017.15.4.518
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Abstract
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- Background/Aims
Patients with small bowel strictures have varied etiologies, including malignancy. Little data are available on the demographic profiles and etiologies of small bowel strictures in patients who undergo surgery because of intestinal obstruction but do not have a definitive pre-operative diagnosis. MethodsRetrospective data were analyzed for all patients operated between January 2000 and October 2014 for small bowel strictures without mass lesions and a definite diagnosis after imaging and endoscopic examinations. Demographic parameters, imaging, endoscopic, and histological data were extracted from the medical records. Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to identify factors that could differentiate between intestinal tuberculosis (ITB) and Crohn's disease (CD) and between malignant and benign strictures. ResultsOf the 7,425 reviewed medical records, 89 met the inclusion criteria. The most common site of strictures was the proximal small intestine (41.5%). The most common histological diagnoses in patients with small bowel strictures were ITB (26.9%), CD (23.5%), non-specific strictures (20.2%), malignancy (15.5%), ischemia (10.1%), and other complications (3.4%). Patients with malignant strictures were older than patients with benign etiologies (47.6±15.9 years vs. 37.4±16.4 years, P=0.03) and age >50 years had a specificity for malignant etiology of 80%. Only 7.1% of the patients with malignant strictures had more than 1 stricture and 64% had proximally located strictures. Diarrhea was the only factor that predicted the diagnosis of CD 6.5 (95% confidence interval, 1.10–38.25; P=0.038) compared with the diagnosis of ITB. ConclusionsMalignancy was the cause of small bowel strictures in approximately 16% patients, especially among older patients with a single stricture in the proximal location. Empirical therapy should be avoided and the threshold for surgical resection is low in these patients.
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Citations
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- Cryptogenic multifocal ulcerous stenosing enteritis: A ray of light on the umbra of the dark continent
Mithu Bhowmick, Vishal Sharma Indian Journal of Gastroenterology.2024; 43(6): 1082. CrossRef - Ileal endometriosis: a rare cause of multifocal small bowel strictures
Timothy Peacock, William Harrison, Alexandra Limmer, Suzanne Di Sano, King‐Sang Wong ANZ Journal of Surgery.2022; 92(7-8): 1914. CrossRef - Infectious diseases affecting the small bowel – what not to miss
Martin Keuchel, Marc Bota, Peter Baltes Current Opinion in Gastroenterology.2021; 37(3): 255. CrossRef - Small bowel ulcers
Martin Keuchel, Niehls Kurniawan, Peter Baltes Current Opinion in Gastroenterology.2019; 35(3): 213. CrossRef - Rebleeding rate and risk factors in nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug‐induced enteropathy
Junseok Park, Seong Ran Jeon, Jin‐Oh Kim, Hyun Gun Kim, Tae Hee Lee, Jun‐Hyung Cho, Bong Min Ko, Joon Seong Lee, Moon Sung Lee Journal of Digestive Diseases.2018; 19(5): 279. CrossRef
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