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Ileocolonic Findings in Behçet’s Disease / Reply
Author(s) -
Ersan Özaslan
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
digestion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.882
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1421-9867
pISSN - 0012-2823
DOI - 10.1159/000292508
Subject(s) - behcet's disease , medicine , disease , gastroenterology , dermatology
borders, and located in the ileocecal area were classified as having ‘typical ulcers’. Ulcerations that did not fulfill all of the characteristics, such as several tiny, shallow, aphthous ulcers were regarded as atypical. The clinical characteristics were categorized as definite, probable, suspected and non-diagnostic. These criteria were validated in a group of 280 patients with ileocolonic ulcers of whom 145 were diagnosed as having intestinal BD as a final diagnosis. The overall sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy of the diagnostic probability of these criteria were 98.6, 83.0, 86.1, 98.2, and 91.1%, respectively. Köklü et al. [1] did not describe any features of macroscopic ileocolonic lesions apart from defining them as ‘ulcers’. What about the variables, such as ulcer shape, margin and distribution of lesions? Moreover, biopsies of those macroscopic ulcers (a total of 9 cases) showed vasculitis in only 3 cases, while 5 cases had ileitis, 1 amebiasis, and 1 nonspecific ileitis. In the present series the question regarding histology should also apply for microscopic involvement of BD cases with normal endoscopy. Only 2 cases with vasculitis were found, while the remaining patients had chronic ileitis (8 cases), nonspecific ileitis (12 cases), and villous atrophy (1 case). Although the microscopic findings of BD patients were higher compared to the control group, the reported features are largely nonspecific. I wonder about the details of the macroscopic lesions and would like to have further comments regarding the microscopic features. Dear Sir, I read with great interest the paper written by Köklü et al. [1] describing the frequency of gastrointestinal involvement at endoscopy in Turkish patients with Behçet’s disease (BD). Of 50 asymptomatic patients with BD, 9 (18%) had ileum ulcers and the remaining 41 (82%) had a normal ileum at colonoscopy. Moreover, histologic examination of BD patients with a normal colon and terminal ileum at colonoscopy revealed 61% abnormal ileum histologies. So, they concluded that most of the patients with BD have macroscopic or microscopic ileocolonic involvement. Although they contributed an original investigation regarding ileal histologies of BD, many questions arise from their findings. First, their description of intestinal BD needs further clarification. The objective diagnosis of intestinal BD is generally very difficult due to its rareness, the asynchronous nature of multi-systemic findings and the absence of specific macroscopic or microscopic features. Although histological vasculitis leads to a definite diagnosis of intestinal BD, it is rarely observed [2] . Biopsies often show a nonspecific inflammatory infiltrate, and therefore it plays a role mainly in excluding other intestinal diseases rather than in confirming the diagnosis of intestinal BD. There is no worldwide consensus for the diagnosis and management of intestinal BD, but we are thankful to efforts of a Korean group which proposed an algorithm based on the type of ileocolonic ulcerations and clinical manifestations [3] . Patients with ! 5 ulcers that were oval in shape, deep, with discrete Published online: June 24, 2010

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