Abstract

Ultrasound of the bowel with a focus on IBD: the new best practice

Abdom Radiol (NY). 2024 Aug 14. doi: 10.1007/s00261-024-04496-1.Online ahead of print.

Christina Merrill 1Stephanie R Wilson 2 3

 
     

Author information

1University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.

2Department of Radiology, Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada. srwilson@ucalgary.ca.

3Foothills Medical Center, 1403 29 Street NW, Calgary, AB, T2N 2T9, Canada. srwilson@ucalgary.ca.

Abstract

Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) is a lifelong chronic disease affecting any part of the gastrointestinal tract with a predilection for the terminal ileum. IBD patients require repeat imaging throughout the course of their disease, necessitating a safe, noninvasive, available, and repeatable method. Imaging is required at diagnosis, routine surveillance, and acute exacerbation of disease. Ultrasound imaging meets these demands with a high degree of accuracy and wide patient acceptance. Ultrasound provides high-resolution imaging and is excellent for detailed evaluation of the bowel wall and surrounding soft tissues. Regular greyscale bowel evaluation and color Doppler imaging now have accepted standards for evaluating disease activity based on wall thickness, perienteric inflammatory fat, and blood flow, which is invaluable in staging and grading disease. High-resolution dynamic real-time imaging on ultrasound has the ability to show functional as well as morphologic detail, including dysfunctional peristalsis associated with bowel stricture and incomplete mechanical bowel obstruction. Fibrostenotic and penetrating complications of IBD may be associated with an acute or chronic presentation that is easily assessed using ultrasound. Newer software technologies for ultrasound, including Contrast-Enhanced ultrasound and Shear wave elastography, have transformed ultrasound from a basic preliminary imaging technique into a highly sophisticated modality that is now competitive with CT and MR enterography for managing IBD patients. Our long experience with ultrasound of the bowel suggests that the new best practice would include ultrasound as the first test for evaluation of the bowel at any stage of the disease.

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