Abstract
A systematic study of II cases of Crohn's disease has disclosed a characteristically recurring pattern of obliterative vascular lesions—predominantly degenerative, rarely inflammatory—which (in connection with other pathologic phenomena) is believed to have diagnostic importance in differentiation of the fully developed lesion from that of ulcerative colitis. The development of vascular changes is also mirrored in the sequence of angiographic changes, and is yet another argument for a separate etiology in Crohn's disease.
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