1.Small Bowel Endoscopy in Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Hirokazu YAMAGAMI ; Kenji WATANABE ; Noriko KAMATA ; Mitsue SOGAWA ; Tetsuo ARAKAWA
Clinical Endoscopy 2013;46(4):321-326
Crohn disease (CD) is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease that affects the entire gastrointestinal tract but is most frequently localized to the large and small bowel. Small bowel endoscopy helps with the differential diagnosis of CD in suspected CD patients. Early diagnosis of CD is preferable for suspected CD conditions to improve chronic inflammatory infiltrates, fibrosis. Small bowel endoscopy can help with the early detection of active disease, thus leading to early therapy before the onset of clinical symptoms of established CD. Some patients with CD have mucosal inflammatory changes not in the terminal ileum but in the proximal small bowel. Conventional ileocolonoscopy cannot detect ileal involvement proximal to the terminal ileum. Small bowel endoscopy, however, can be useful for evaluating these small bowel involvements in patients with CD. Small bowel endoscopy by endoscopic balloon dilation (EBD) enables the treatment of small bowel strictures in patients with CD. However, many practical issues still need to be addressed, such as endoscopic findings for early detection of CD, application compared with other imaging modalities, determination of the appropriate interval for endoscopic surveillance of small bowel lesions in patients with CD, and long-term prognosis after EBD.
Capsule Endoscopy
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Constriction, Pathologic
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Crohn Disease
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Early Diagnosis
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Endoscopy
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Fibrosis
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Gastrointestinal Tract
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Humans
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Ileum
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Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
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Prognosis
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Secondary Prevention
2.The Blended Teaching with Information and Communication Technology-based Learning before Classes and Simulated Clinical Problem-solving Training for the First-year Nursing Students
Hiroki NAMIKAWA ; Yasuhiko TAKEMOTO ; Tomomi TAKESHIGE ; Sachiko OKU ; Ayako MAKUUCHI ; Kazuo FUKUMOTO ; Masanori KOBAYASHI ; Shigeki KINUHATA ; Hiromitsu TOYODA ; Noriko KAMATA ; Yoshihiro TOCHINO ; Mina MORIMURA ; Taichi SHUTO
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2017;40(4):192-194
3.Effect of elemental diet combined with infliximab dose escalation in patients with Crohn's disease with loss of response to infliximab: CERISIER trial.
Tadakazu HISAMATSU ; Reiko KUNISAKI ; Shiro NAKAMURA ; Tomoyuki TSUJIKAWA ; Fumihito HIRAI ; Hiroshi NAKASE ; Kenji WATANABE ; Kaoru YOKOYAMA ; Masakazu NAGAHORI ; Takanori KANAI ; Makoto NAGANUMA ; Hirofumi MICHIMAE ; Akira ANDOH ; Akihiro YAMADA ; Tadashi YOKOYAMA ; Noriko KAMATA ; Shinji TANAKA ; Yasuo SUZUKI ; Toshifumi HIBI ; Mamoru WATANABE
Intestinal Research 2018;16(3):494-498
No abstract available.
Crohn Disease*
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Food, Formulated*
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Humans
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Infliximab*
4.Seven days triple therapy for eradication of Helicobacter pylori does not alter the disease activity of patients with inflammatory bowel disease.
Shinichiro SHINZAKI ; Toshimitsu FUJII ; Shigeki BAMBA ; Maiko OGAWA ; Taku KOBAYASHI ; Masahide OSHITA ; Hiroki TANAKA ; Keiji OZEKI ; Sakuma TAKAHASHI ; Hiroki KITAMOTO ; Kazuhito KANI ; Sohachi NANJO ; Takeshi SUGAYA ; Yuko SAKAKIBARA ; Toshihiro INOKUCHI ; Kazuki KAKIMOTO ; Akihiro YAMADA ; Hisae YASUHARA ; Yoko YOKOYAMA ; Takuya YOSHINO ; Akira MATSUI ; Misaki NAKAMURA ; Taku TOMIZAWA ; Ryosuke SAKEMI ; Noriko KAMATA ; Toshifumi HIBI
Intestinal Research 2018;16(4):609-618
BACKGROUND/AIMS: The influences of Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy on the disease course of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are still unclear. We therefore conducted a multicenter, retrospective cohort study to evaluate the safety of H. pylori eradication therapy for IBD patients. METHODS: IBD patients with H. pylori eradication from 2005 to 2015 (eradication group) and control patients (non-eradication group; 2 paired IBD patients without H. pylori eradication matched with each eradicated patient) were included. IBD exacerbation (increased/additional IBD drug or IBD-associated hospitalization/surgery) and disease improvement based on the physicians’ global assessment were investigated at baseline, and at 2 and 6 months after eradication or observation. RESULTS: A total of 429 IBD (378 ulcerative colitis, 51 Crohn’s disease) patients, comprising 144 patients in the eradication group and 285 patients in the non-eradication group, were enrolled at 25 institutions. IBD exacerbation was comparable between groups (eradication group: 8.3% at 2 months [odds ratio, 1.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.78–3.92; P=0.170], 11.8% at 6 months [odds ratio, 1.60; 95% confidence interval, 0.81–3.11; P=0.172]). Based on the physicians’ global assessment at 2 months, none of the patients in the eradication group improved, whereas 3.2% of the patients in the non-eradication group improved (P=0.019). Multivariate analysis revealed that active disease at baseline, but not H. pylori eradication, was an independent factor for IBD exacerbation during 2 months’ observation period. The overall eradication rate was 84.0%–comparable to previous reports in non-IBD patients. CONCLUSIONS: H. pylori eradication therapy does not alter the short-term disease activity of IBD.
Clarithromycin
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Cohort Studies
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Colitis, Ulcerative
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Helicobacter pylori*
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Helicobacter*
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Humans
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Inflammatory Bowel Diseases*
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Metronidazole
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Multivariate Analysis
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Retrospective Studies