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Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Update Course 2014

Video Published 2019-01-11 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Case-based discussion of a 12-year-old with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease presenting with perianal abscess and fibrostenotic disease. Panel reviews diagnostic imaging modalities (MR enterography vs CT enterography vs ultrasound) and surgical management strategies for combined perianal and small bowel disease.

Key Takeaways

  • MR enterography is preferred over CT for evaluating fibrostenotic and fistulizing Crohn's, providing both anatomic detail and disease chronicity assessment.
  • Contrast-enhanced ultrasound shows 95-100% sensitivity/specificity for Crohn's in Europe but remains unapproved by FDA for US clinical use.
  • Pediatric Crohn's patients presenting with perirectal abscess often have concurrent small bowel disease requiring comprehensive imaging evaluation.
  • Ileocecal resection is indicated for symptomatic strictures with proximal dilation and significant weight loss despite 4 months of maximal medical therapy.
  • Non-cutting setons are preferred for perianal fistulas in active Crohn's to allow medical optimization before definitive surgical intervention.

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