TB Research

CT ENTEROCLYSIS / CT ENTEROGRAPHY FOR DIFFERENTIATING INTESTINAL TUBERCULOSIS FROM CROHN’S DISEASE

Alpana Alpana, Rajanikant R Yadav, Geeta Yadav, Praveer Rai, Kunti Yadav, Archna Gupta

Journal of Evidence Based Medicine and Healthcare · 2019-07

Abstract

BACKGROUND
\nIntestinal tuberculosis is highly prevalent in India and the incidence of Crohn’s disease is also increasing. Both these diseases
\nhave similar clinical presentation, imaging and pathological features. This makes differentiation between these two entities
\nchallenging. Differentiating these entities is important because there is a considerable difference in their management. CT
\nenteroclysis (CT-EC) and CT enterography (CT-EG) are newer imaging techniques which provide good luminal distention of the
\nbowel and allow better detection of bowel wall lesions, their pattern of enhancement and also detect extra-intestinal findings in
\nthe abdomen. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of CT-EC/CT-EG in the detection, characterization and differentiation
\nof intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn’s disease.
\nMETHODS
\nOne hundred and fifty patients with clinically suspected intestinal tuberculosis or Crohn’s diseases were subjected to CT-EC/CTEG. Findings on CT-EC/CT-EG were correlated with other investigations (radiological, endoscopic, histopathological,
\nmicrobiological, body fluid examination) and improvement on empirical therapy.
\nRESULTS
\nSeventy-nine patients had bowel lesions based on findings on CT-EC/CT-EG and other investigations of which 47, 18 and 14
\npatients had final diagnoses of intestinal tuberculosis, Crohn’s disease and other bowel lesions (ulcerative colitis, duodenal
\nulcers, strictures of undetermined aetiology, parasitic infections and appendicitis) respectively. The sensitivity of CT-EC/CT-EG
\nfor detecting bowel involvement in intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn’s disease was 91.48% and 94.44% respectively. Contiguous
\ninvolvement of terminal ileum, ileo-cecal junction and adjacent colon, homogenous enhancement of bowel wall thickening, and
\nabdominal lymphadenopathy were significantly more common in intestinal tuberculosis while jejunal involvement, mural
\nstratification pattern of enhancement, strictures, skip lesions, mesenteric fat stranding and increased mesenteric vascularity
\nwere significantly commoner in Crohn’s disease. Associated calcified and necrotic abdominal lymphadenopathy, cocoon
\nformation and vertebral involvement were specific to intestinal tuberculosis.
\nCONCLUSIONS
\nCT-EC/CT-EG are sensitive investigations for detection of bowel lesions in intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn’s disease. No site of
\nbowel involvement or pattern of enhancement of bowel wall thickening is specific to intestinal tuberculosis or Crohn’s disease.
\nHowever, associated extra-intestinal findings on CT-EC/CT-EG and findings on other investigations can help differentiate
\nbetween intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn’s disease.
\n

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Crohn's disease
  • INTESTINAL TUBERCULOSIS
  • Radiology
  • Tuberculosis
  • Internal medicine
  • Nuclear medicine
  • Disease
  • Gastroenterology