Clinical application of single-balloon and double-balloon enteroscopy in pediatric small bowel diseases: a retrospective study of 576 cases.
10.7499/j.issn.1008-8830.2411045
- Author:
Can-Lin LI
1
;
Jie-Yu YOU
1
;
Yan-Hong LUO
1
;
Hong-Juan OU-YANG
1
;
Li LIU
1
;
Wen-Ting ZHANG
1
;
Jia-Qi DUAN
1
;
Na JIANG
1
;
Mei-Zheng ZHAN
1
;
Chen-Xi LIU
1
;
Juan ZHOU
1
;
Ling-Zhi YUAN
1
;
Hong-Mei ZHAO
1
Author Information
1. Department of Digestive Nutrition, Hunan Children's Hospital, Changsha 410007, China.
- Publication Type:English Abstract
- Keywords:
Child;
Computed tomography enterography;
Double-balloon enteroscopy;
Single-balloon enteroscopy;
Small bowel disease
- MeSH:
Retrospective Studies;
Treatment Outcome;
Double-Balloon Enteroscopy/statistics & numerical data*;
Single-Balloon Enteroscopy/statistics & numerical data*;
Humans;
Male;
Female;
Child;
Operative Time;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed/statistics & numerical data*;
Sensitivity and Specificity;
Intestine, Small/surgery*;
Intestinal Diseases/surgery*
- From:
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics
2025;27(7):822-828
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVES:To evaluate the effectiveness of single-balloon and double-balloon enteroscopy in diagnosing pediatric small bowel diseases and assess the diagnostic efficacy of computed tomography enterography (CTE) for small bowel diseases using enteroscopy as the reference standard.
METHODS:Clinical data from 576 children who underwent enteroscopy at Hunan Children's Hospital between January 2017 and December 2023 were retrospectively collected. The children were categorized based on enteroscopy type into the single-balloon enteroscopy (SBE) group (n=457) and double-balloon enteroscopy (DBE) group (n=119), and the clinical data were compared between the two groups. The sensitivity and specificity of CTE for diagnosing small bowel diseases were evaluated using enteroscopy results as the standard.
RESULTS:Among the 576 children, small bowel lesions were detected by enteroscopy in 274 children (47.6%).There was no significant difference in lesion detection rates or complication rates between the SBE and DBE groups (P>0.05), but the DBE group had deeper insertion, longer procedure time, and higher complete small bowel examination rate (P<0.05). The complication rate during enteroscopy was 4.3% (25/576), with 18 cases (3.1%) of mild complications and 7 cases (1.2%) of severe complications, which improved with symptomatic treatment, surgical, or endoscopic intervention. Among the 412 children who underwent CTE, the sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing small bowel diseases were 44.4% and 71.3%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS:SBE and DBE have similar diagnostic efficacy for pediatric small bowel diseases, but DBE is preferred for suspected deep small bowel lesions and comprehensive small bowel examination. Enteroscopy in children demonstrates relatively good overall safety. CTE demonstrates relatively low sensitivity but comparatively high specificity for diagnosing small bowel diseases.