AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to identify ultrasound characteristics that indicate submucosal fat deposition (the fat halo sign, FHS) in the intestinal walls of Crohn's disease patients using CT imaging data from 68 patients over 10 years.
  • - Results showed that 31% of patients had FHS on CT, with a significant difference in submucosal thickness between those with (4.19 mm) and without FHS (2.41 mm), establishing a threshold of 3.1 mm for ultrasound detection.
  • - The findings suggest that marked thickening of the submucosal layer on ultrasound can indicate FHS in Crohn's patients, emphasizing the need for additional methods, like color Doppler, to assess

Article Abstract

Background/aims: The study objective is to investigate the ultrasound features that allow suspecting the presence of submucosal fat deposition, called the fat halo sign (FHS), in the intestinal wall of patients with Crohn's disease.

Methods: Computed tomography (CT) examinations over a period of 10 years were reviewed for the presence of the FHS in the bowel wall. A measurement of less than -10 Hounsfield units was regarded as indicative of fat. We included only patients who had undergone ultrasound examinations 3 months before or after CT. The study cohort group comprised 68 patients. Wall and submucosal thickness were measured on longitudinal ultrasound sections. A receiver operating characteristic curve was constructed to determine the best cutoff of ultrasound submucosal wall thickness value for predicting FHS in the bowel wall determined on CT.

Results: The FHS was present in 22 patients (31%) on CT. There were significant differences between submucosal thickness of patients with FHS and patients without FHS (4.19 mm vs. 2.41 mm). From the receiver operating characteristic curve, a threshold value of 3.1 mm of submucosal thickness had the best sensitivity and specificity to suspect FHS (95.5% and 89.1%, respectively; area under the curve, 0.962), with an odds ratio of 172. All of 16 patients with a submucosal thickness >3.9 mm had FHS.

Conclusions: FHS in patients with Crohn's disease can be suspected on ultrasound in cases with marked thickening of the submucosa layer. In these cases, the activity of the disease should be measured by other parameters such as the color Doppler.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10397555PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5217/ir.2022.00030DOI Listing

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