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acquired immune deficiency syndrome Crohn’s disease Cytomegalovirus gastrointestinal human immunodeficiency virus inflammatory bowel disease ileocecal valve ulcerative colitis AIDS
CD
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Infectious bowel diseases are more common in developing countries than industrialized countries. On the other hand, the incidence and prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in the former are increasing . Superimposed bacterial, viral, fungal, or parasitic infection occur in patients with underlying IBD with or without concurrent use of immunosuppressive drugs. Fortunately, the majority of patients with primary infectious bowel diseases are self-limited entities. Conventional stool culture, and ova and parasites are commonly performed to identify pathogens. Multipathogen molecular panels on diarrheal stool samples and, in some cases, rectal swabs have emerged as an important diagnostic modality for the identification of various bacterial, viral, and parasitic pathogens.
Chronic infection with certain pathogens (such as tuberculosis) can lead to chronic bowel inflammation, posing a challenge in the differential diagnosis with true IBD. While upper and lower gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopies offer limited diagnostic value in acute enteritis or acute colitis, they are valuable tools for the evaluation of chronic bowel symptoms (>weeks of duration). Some of infectious enteritis or colitis have characteristic features on endoscopy. In addition, endoscopy provides access to tissue sampling. In this chapter, endoscopic features of common bacteria, virus, and parasite-associated enteritis or colitis, which mimics IBD are described ( Table 25.1 ). Superimposed infection in IBD is discussed in a separate chapter ( Chapter 23 : Superimposed infections in inflammatory bowel diseases).
Bacteria | Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Clostridium difficile , Salmonella , Shigella , Yersinia , Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli , Campylobacter , Aeromonas , Plesiomonas |
Viruses | Human immunodeficiency virus, Cytomegalovirus , Epstein–Barr virus |
Fungi | Candida albicans , Histoplasma , Coccidioides , Blastomyces dermatitidis |
Parasites | Giardia, Cryptosporidium lamblia , Entamoeba histolytica , Strongyloides stercoralis , Schistosoma |
A variety of bacterial agents can cause enteritis and colitis. Some of them, particularly, intracellular bacteria can cause chronic enteritis or colitis, mimicking IBD.
The small and large bowel is a common site for extrapulmonary tuberculosis resulting from Mycobacterium tuberculosis . The causal agents can be M. tuberculosis or Mycobacterium bovis . The pathogenetic route of infection of the latter agent is through drinking contaminated dairy products. The main routes of infection of intestinal tuberculosis (ITB) are GI tract, blood flow, or adjacent tuberculous lesions. The gold standard for the diagnosis of ITB is identification of the bacteria in the stool or GI tissue specimens. However, the detection of the bacterial agent can be challenging. Skin and serological tests can only provide supportive evidence, and their use in the differential diagnosis of ITB and Crohn’s disease (CD) has been limited, especially in endemic areas of tuberculosis.
ITB and CD share many aspects of clinical, endoscopic, radiographic, and histologic examinations. Both can be presented with low-grade fever, night sweats, abdominal pain, diarrhea, or abdominal mass. Both have a predilection of involvement of the terminal ileum and ileocecal valve (ICV). Parenteral manifestations and intestinal fistula, however, appear to be more common in CD than ITB.
Endoscopy can play an important role in the differential diagnosis of ITB and CD ( Table 25.2 ). Generally, the endoscopic features of CD include aphthous ulcers, asymmetrical longitudinal ulcers, skip lesions, and the presence of strictures, fistulae, or perianal disease. The ICV often has ulcers, stricture, or deformity in patients with distal ileum ITB. In contrast, ulcers in ITB are often circumferentially distributed. While mucosal nodularity of the ileum is more common in ITB, cobblestoning of the ileal mucosa is more often seen in CD ( Figs. 25.1 and 25.2 ) . Histologic distinction between ITB and CD is discussed in a separate chapter ( Chapter 34 : Histology correlation with common endoscopic abnormalities). The overlapping features between ITB and CD can make the differential diagnosis difficult, which has mandated empiric anti-ITB therapy in some patients.
Intestinal tuberculosis | Crohn’s disease | |
---|---|---|
Orientation of ulcers | Traverse | Longitudinal |
Aphthous erosions | +/− | ++ |
Cobblestoning mucosa | + | ++ |
Nodular mucosa | ++ | + |
Mucosal bridge | +/− | + |
Stricture | +/− | +++ |
Fistula | + | ++ |
Ileocecal valve feature | Patulous | Ulcerated, strictured, or deformed |
Colon and rectum involvement | +/− | + |
Perianal disease | +/− | ++ |
Skip lesion | +/− | +++ |
Invasive, intracellular bacteria, such as Salmonella enterica serotype typhi and Yersinia enterocolitica can affect GI tract, with the former causing gastroenteritis and the latter leading to enterocolitis. These foodborne illnesses normally result in acute, self-limited GI diseases. However, some of the patients may develop chronic enteritis or colitis with phenotypes overlapping with that of CD. Their chronic disease process and transmural involvement can have inflammatory, stricturing, or penetrating phenotypes, with manifestations of low-grade fever, night sweat, nausea, bloating, abdominal pain, diarrhea, hematochezia, abdominal mass, or even ascites. On endoscopy, there can be nodularity, ulcers, and strictures ( Fig. 25.3 ) . Its distinction from IBD, particularly CD, is critical, as the management of the two disease entities is different.
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