The Value of Small Bowel Wall Contrast Enhancement After Sulfur Hexafluoride-Filled Microbubble Injection to Differentiate Inflammatory from Fibrotic Strictures in Patients with Crohn's Disease
We analysed the value of contrast-enhanced ultrasound to differentiate inflammatory from fibrotic ileal
strictures in patients with Crohn’s disease (CD). Twenty-eight patients (17 male and 11 female; mean age ± SD,
48.5 ± 17.17 years) with a biopsy-proven diagnosis of CD were included. In each patient, the terminal ileal loop
was scanned by a convex-array probe (2–5 MHz) before and after sulphur hexafluoride-filled microbubble injection.
The digital cine-clip registered after microbubble injection during the first-pass dynamic enhancement was
quantified in gray-scale levels by a dedicated software through manually drawn regions-of-interest (ROIs) encompassing
the anterior bowel wall. Time-intensity curves from patients with inflammatory and fibrotic ileal strictures,
fitted according to the theoretical gamma variate curve, were compared. Inflammatory vs. fibrotic ileal
strictures differed in the percentage of maximal enhancement (45.86 ± 5.32 vs. 37.33 ± 16.24%; p , 0.05) and
area under the enhancement curve (1168.25 ± 437.65 vs. 570.47 ± 323.08; p , 0.05), whereas the difference in
time to peak enhancement was found not significant (9.25 ± 4.21 vs. 12.01 ± 7.34 s; p.0.05). The quantitative analysis
of small bowel wall contrast enhancement after microbubble contrast agent injection may differentiate inflammatory
from fibrotic ileal strictures in patients with CD.