1.All that elongates is not a polyp
Atsushi IRAHA ; Moemi KANEMOTO ; Akira HOKAMA
Clinical Endoscopy 2022;55(6):824-825
4.Gallbladder Dysfunction Diagnosed by Cholescintigraphy with a Fatty Meal.
Akira HOKAMA ; Kazuto KISHIMOTO ; Yasushi IHAMA ; Hiroshi CHINEN ; Fukunori KINJO ; Jiro FUJITA
Gut and Liver 2010;4(4):556-557
No abstract available.
Gallbladder
;
Meals
5.Epiphrenic Esophageal Diverticulum
Akira HOKAMA ; Yoriyuki SHIMAZAKI ; Jun FUKUCHI ; Maki NISHIZAWA
Chonnam Medical Journal 2023;59(2):142-142
7.Rectal Dieulafoy Lesion
Erika KOGA ; Satoshi ASHIMINE ; Atsushi IRAHA ; Akira HOKAMA
Chonnam Medical Journal 2022;58(1):48-49
9.A pulmonary nodule in a patient with Crohn's disease
Akira HOKAMA ; Shusaku HARANAGA ; Takanobu SASAKI ; Hirofumi MATSUMOTO ; Tetsuya OHIRA ; Atsushi IRAHA ; Tetsu KINJO ; Saifun NAHAR ; Jiro FUJITA
Intestinal Research 2019;17(3):438-439
No abstract available.
Crohn Disease
;
Humans
10.Whipple disease mimicking inflammatory bowel disease
Maiko TATSUKI ; Takashi ISHIGE ; Yoshiko IGARASHI ; Reiko HATORI ; Akira HOKAMA ; Junko HIRATO ; Aleixo MUISE ; Takumi TAKIZAWA ; Hirokazu ARAKAWA
Intestinal Research 2021;19(1):119-125
Whipple disease is a systemic chronic infection caused by Tropheryma whipplei. Although chronic diarrhea is a common gastrointestinal symptom, diagnosis is often difficult because there are no specific endoscopic findings, and the pathogen is not detectable by stool culture. We present a female patient with Whipple disease who developed chronic bloody diarrhea and growth retardation at the age of 4 years. Colonoscopy showed a mildly edematous terminal ileum and marked erythema without vascular patterns throughout the sigmoid colon and rectum. Subsequently, a primary diagnosis of ulcerative colitis was made. Histopathological analysis of the terminal ileum showed the presence of foamy macrophages filled with periodic acidSchiff-positive particles. Polymerase chain reaction using DNA from a terminal ileum biopsy sample amplified a fragment of 16S rRNA from T. whipplei. Antibiotic treatment relieved the patient’s symptoms. There was no evidence of immunodeficiency in the present case. Since Whipple disease worsens after anti-tumor necrosis factor inhibitor therapy, considering this infection in the differential diagnosis may be important in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, especially before initiation of immunotherapy.