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Ileal Fistula

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All right, here’s a case where we see that the

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distal ileum has a number of segments of bowel

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that are enhancing, and there’s relative sparing

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of the terminal ileum. But all this area here

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is hyper-enhancing in the distal ileum,

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and you can compare it to the terminal ileum to see

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that it’s clearly abnormal and clearly inflamed.

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But we also see this kind of

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funniness going on over here.

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We need to scrutinize this carefully

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on other planes and other sequences.

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On a coronal image, we see that there’s edema,

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so there’s a degree of active inflammation

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here, most likely, that we need to confirm

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on our fat-saturated sequences.

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And we also see the same thing where it’s

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kind of this funny stuff going on back here,

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extending from the distal ileum to that region.

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And also notice that a lot of this bowel is narrow,

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suggesting that there’s some stricturing component.

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For listening.

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So on the axial sequence, this is where I think we

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can really see exactly what’s going on, knowing that

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all that area here is inflamed and abnormal bowel.

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Now we see that this is our TI coming through

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here. We see a stricture here, and we see maybe

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a little bit of dilation, but more importantly,

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we see this kind of asterisk-shaped abnormality.

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And a lot of times these fistulas, when they

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develop, they have this kind of asterisk

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configuration as everything kind of scars down

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right next to where a fistula’s tract starts to

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form through the repeated cycles of inflammation

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and fibrosis that happens with these cases.

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And so we see this kind of

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branching asterisk scarred appearance.

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And then we can see that this segment here

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is actually a segment of sigmoid colon that’s

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come up adjacent to the distal ileum.

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Additionally, this is the cecum, and this

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is the appendix, and the appendix has got

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itself intertwined with this process.

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So we have a really complex fistula in the

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end, communicating between the sigmoid colon

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and the appendix and the terminal ileum.

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Now, a couple other things to know.

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For one, you don’t see a lot of proximal dilation.

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And when there’s a fistula, oftentimes you

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won’t see the dilation proximally that you would

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expect to see with a significant stricture.

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So when you have a fistula, always be suspicious that

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there’s also a stricture because there usually is.

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The reason you don’t have more proximal

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dilation is because the bowel decompresses

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itself through the fistula’s tract.

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So you won’t get the dilation that

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you’d like to see to call a stricture.

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But there’s clearly a stricture in

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this case that’s proximal to the fistula.

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And in this coronal sequence, you can

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actually see, oftentimes you see this little

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bright fistulous tract surrounded by the

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inflammation and fibrosis around that tract.

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You can see that communicating really

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clearly from the distal ileum to the sigmoid

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colon, and this is the appendix here.

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So this is a complex fistula with a

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classic asterisk-shaped appearance.

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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