pathological features
Last reviewed 05/2022
Macroscopically in Crohn's disease there may be a swollen, reddened and rubbery bowel with:
- skip lesions - discontinuous sites of pathology along the gastrointestinal tract
- cobblestone ulceration; a result of apthous ulceration progressing to oedema and nodular thickening
- lead pipe thickening - thickened, stiff bowel
- narrowed lumen
- strictures
- 'rose-thorn' narrow-mouthed ulcers which lead to fistulae
- fistulae, often between adherent bowel and/or bladder, vagina, other abdominal organs or the abdominal wall
- mesenteric fat covering serosa (1)
- enlarged mesenteric nodes
Microscopically, there is:
- non-caseating granulomas - not always present
- transmural inflammation and lymphocyte infiltration (1)
Crohn's disease may involve any part of the bowel from the mouth to the anus:
- the terminal ileum is involved in nearly 50% of cases
- jejunoileitis is also seen, but most ileal inflammation usually ends abruptly at the ileocaecal junction
- caecal and right colonic involvement is more common than lesions in the stomach and duodenum
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