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Classic Fistula Appearances

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So I feel like I'm beating a dead horse to some

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extent showing all these fistula cases, but I

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think it's really important that everybody sees

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a lot of these because in my practice, one of

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the things that I see missed frequently and the

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drastically alters management is people don't

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see these fistulas because they just haven't been

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looking for them and haven't seen enough of them.

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And so they get referred to the university and they've

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had images with fistulas on them, and nobody's talked

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about it, and the patient just never gets better

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and it's because they have this chronic fistula.

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So I really want to show you several kinds of patterns

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where you can see what these fistulas look like because

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once you've seen a few, then they start to be like, oh

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look at that, that's that architectural

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distortion and that asterisk appearance, that’s

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what fistulas in Crohn's disease look like.

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So here's a case where there's a lot of

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inflammation in the right lower quadrant.

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You may think that that's just kind of bowel, but when

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you look at it, all the bowel is really distorted.

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Here's your ascending colon, the cecum, and it's kind

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of distorted as it approaches this kind of nidus here.

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You can see the central nidus that's non-enhancing.

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It's also involving other loops of bowel.

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So here's a loop of bowel coming from the left

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and then this distal ileum is involved and

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it's all sucked in towards this area, and really

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burn this image into your head because it's

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got this really nice asterisk shape in it.

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There's a central nidus in it and all

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the bowel kind of emanates from that.

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Additionally, you can see it's got a branching sinus

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tract that comes down through here, and so this is

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another complex kind of classic Crohn's-type fistula.

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Once you've seen a few of these, you're

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not going to miss them in the future

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as long as you keep looking for them.

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But keep your eye out for that architectural

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distortion, that central nidus, and that

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asterisk shape, because that's the fistula

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that everybody needs and wants to know about.

Report

Faculty

Benjamin Spilseth, MD, MBA, FSAR

Associate Professor of Radiology, Division Director of Abdominal Radiology

University of Minnesota

Tags

Small Bowel

Non-infectious Inflammatory

MRI

Large Bowel-Colon

Idiopathic

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Crohn’s Disease

Body

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