1. Endoscopic classification and pathological features of primary intestinal lymphangiectasia.
- Author
-
Meng MM, Liu KL, Xue XY, Hao K, Dong J, Yu CK, Liu H, Wang CH, Su H, Lin W, Jiang GJ, Wei N, Wang RG, Shen WB, and Wu J
- Subjects
- Edema etiology, Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal adverse effects, Humans, Intestine, Small pathology, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Lymphangiectasis, Intestinal diagnostic imaging, Lymphangiectasis, Intestinal pathology
- Abstract
Background: The appearance of the intestinal mucosa during endoscopy varies among patients with primary intestinal lymphangiectasia (PIL)., Aim: To classify the endoscopic features of the intestinal mucosa in PIL under endoscopy, combine the patients' imaging and pathological characteristics of the patients, and explain their causes., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the endoscopic images of 123 patients with PIL who were treated at the hospital between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2018. We compared and analyzed all endoscopic images, classified them into four types according to the endoscopic features of the intestinal mucosa, and analyzed the post-lymphographic computed tomography (PLCT) and pathological characteristics of each type., Results: According to the endoscopic features of PIL in 123 patients observed during endoscopy, they were classified into four types: nodular-type, granular-type, vesicular-type, and edematous-type. PLCT showed diffuse thickening of the small intestinal wall, and no contrast agent was seen in the small intestinal wall and mesentery in the patients with nodular and granular types. Contrast agent was scattered in the small intestinal wall and mesentery in the patients with vesicular and edematous types. Analysis of the small intestinal mucosal pathology revealed that nodular-type and granular-type lymphangiectasia involved the small intestine mucosa in four layers, whereas ectasia of the vesicular- and edematous-type lymphatic vessels largely involved the lamina propria mucosae, submucosae, and muscular layers., Conclusion: Endoscopic classification, combined with the patients' clinical manifestations and pathological examination results, is significant and very useful to clinicians when scoping patients with suspected PIL., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: The authors declare no conflicts of interest for this article., (©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF