Abstract

Patients with gastrointestinal lesions; unsuccessfully diagnosed by endoscopy are challenging to gastroenterologists. We aimed to study the role and safety of ultrasound, its guided biopsy in visualizing and diagnosing these bowel lesions. Sixty-three patients with endoscopically and/or imaging documented gastrointestinal lesions were prospectively enrolled. All had detailed high-frequency (5-8 MHz) transabdominal bowel ultrasound examination to identify, localize and characterize the lesions, which were further biopsied using ultrasound guidance. Lesions were histo-pathologically diagnosed; 57 (90.5%) were malignant and 6 (9.5%) were benign. Ultrasound was able to localize all the lesions. They were characterized as focal in 12 (19.1%) and diffuse bowel wall involvement in 51 (80.9%) patients. Ultrasound was capable of suggesting the nature of diffuse bowel involvement whether benign or malignant in 94.1%. Comparing malignant diffuse bowel lesions and benign ones; the former had greater mean wall thickness (2.2 vs. 1.1 cm), loss of layering pattern (87.2 vs. 50%), asymmetrical pattern of involvement (78.7 vs. 0%), short length of affected segment (87.2 vs. 50%) and paucity of perilesional findings. Ultrasound-guided core biopsy was diagnostic in 60 (95.2%) patients with no reported complications. Diagnostic laparotomy was resorted to in 3 (4.8%). Ultrasound-guided bowel wall core biopsy had sensitivity of 98.2% in diagnosing malignant lesions and specificity of 66.6% in benign lesions. High-frequency transabdominal ultrasound and ultrasound-guided core biopsy of bowel lesions are potentially safe and effective diagnostic methods in select gastrointestinal lesions whenever conventional endoscopic diagnosis was unsuccessful, thus avoiding unnecessary diagnostic surgical procedures.

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