Isolated Crohn's Disease of Stomach A case report and review of the literature .
- Author:
Hyung Kug KIM
;
Seok Yong RYU
;
Hong Yong KIM
- Publication Type:Case Report
- Keywords:
Crohn's disease;
Stomach
- MeSH:
Anal Canal;
Colon;
Crohn Disease*;
Diagnosis;
Gastrointestinal Tract;
Humans;
Ileum;
Incidence;
Mouth;
Nausea;
Stomach*;
Upper Gastrointestinal Tract;
Vomiting
- From:Journal of the Korean Surgical Society
1998;55(2):290-295
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
Crohn's disease is a chronic, nonspecific inflammatory process which most commonly involves the terminal ileum, but which can affect any region of the gastrointestinal tract from the mouth to the anus. When Crohn's disease does involve the upper gastrointestinal tract, there is nearly always concomitant disease in the small bowel or colon. However isolated gastric Crohn's disease is a rare entity, and gastroduodenal involvement in Crohn's disease has been considered unusual, having an incidence of 1.5 to 7.0%. Gastric Crohn's disease usually localizes to antrum of the stomach and or the pyloroduodenal junction. No single feature is pathognomonic of Crohn' disease, and the diagnosis is based on supportive clinical, radiographic, endoscopic, and pathologic findings. Crohn's disease is invariably a diagnosis of exclusion, so infectious, neoplastic, ischemic, infiltrative, and other inflammatory processes must be ruled out. Usually a patient with isolated Crohn's disease of the stomach will have the clinical symptoms of nausea, vomiting, and epigastric pain, and there will be radiographic evidence of a small contracted stomach (or occasionally, a huge dilated stomach). The treatment of stomach Crohn's disease is palliative and symptomatic. In this paper, we describe a patient with Crohn's disease who had diffuse involvement of the entire stomach without any evidence of involvement elsewhere in the gastrointestinal tract.