Volume 13, Issue 3 pp. 331-337
Clinical Review

Role of capsule endoscopy in inflammatory bowel disease: Where we are and where we are going

Jonathan A. Leighton MD

Jonathan A. Leighton MD

Division of Gastroenterology, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Scottsdale, Arizona

Division of Gastroenterology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York

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Peter Legnani MD

Peter Legnani MD

Division of Gastroenterology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York

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Ernest G. Seidman MD, FRCPC, FACG

Corresponding Author

Ernest G. Seidman MD, FRCPC, FACG

Division of Gastroenterology, McGill University Health Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Digestivelab, C10.148, McGill University Health Center, MGH Campus, 1650 Cedar Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3G 1A4Search for more papers by this author
First published: 19 December 2006
Citations: 3

Abstract

Capsule endoscopy (CE) is an innovative technological breakthrough that for the first time provides a noninvasive method to obtain high-resolution imaging of the entire small bowel. Since its recent inception, the diagnostic utility of CE has become well established for the evaluation of diverse ulcerative and inflammatory disorders of the jejunum and ileum. The incredible resolution of its lens (0.1 mm) detects focal villous edema or atrophy, denuded, as well as ulcerated mucosal lesions missed by other imaging techniques. CE has been shown by meta-analysis to be a more sensitive method to investigate patients for small bowel Crohn's disease, with an incremental yield above 30% versus other imaging modalities. In patients with indeterminate colitis, CE is useful in distinguishing between ulcerative and Crohn's colitis. Among patients with established Crohn's disease, CE may be employed to determine: (1) the extent and severity of small bowel involvement, (2) postoperative recurrence, (3) post-therapy mucosal healing, and (4) whether active small bowel inflammatory lesions exist in the clinical setting of functional bowel disorder. Complications are rare and include capsule retention at stricture sites. The new patency capsule can diminish the risk of the latter problem in at-risk patients. CE can also serve as a guide to sites that require biopsies or dilatation by push or double-balloon enteroscopy. However, other causes of small bowel lesions may mimic Crohn's disease. A standard terminology system has thus been developed, and a CE Crohn's disease severity scoring index is currently undergoing validation studies.

(Inflamm Bowel Dis 2007)

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