Differentials

Ulcerative colitis (UC)

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UC presents with features of colitis including left-sided abdominal pain and bloody diarrhoea.

Does not involve small bowel or have oral or perianal disease.

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Colonoscopy differentiates most cases of Crohn's disease (CD) from UC. UC always involves the rectum and is contiguous versus intermittent. Terminal ileitis may be present in UC with pancolitis due to backwash.

Anti-glycan antibodies are more prevalent in CD than in UC, but have a low sensitivity.[71]

Infectious colitis

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History of contact with people who are ill, and travel to endemic areas.

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Stool testing reveals the infectious agent.

Biopsy does not show the typical histological features of Crohn's disease.

Pseudomembranous colitis

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History of recent antibiotic use.

Caution should be taken in differentiating the 2 conditions as Clostridium difficile infection may precipitate flare-up of Crohn's disease.[70]

INVESTIGATIONS

In the proper clinical setting, a positive test for C difficile toxin is diagnostic of pseudomembranous colitis.

Colonoscopy shows pseudomembranes on top of the mucosa, with no ulceration of the underlying tissue.

Ischaemic colitis

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Physical findings in ischaemic colitis usually do not correlate with the severity of pain.

Most patients have risk factors such as atherosclerotic diseases or hypoperfusional states (e.g., congestive heart failure and hypotension).

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Colonoscopy shows mucosal friability in the watershed areas of the left colon.

Radiation colitis

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History of exposure to external beam radiotherapy.

Symptoms include abdominal pain, tenesmus, and chronic bleeding.

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Colonoscopy reveals mucosal inflammation that resembles UC with friable, left-sided fibrotic and ulcerative lesions that are continuous. Many patients have bleeding angioectatic vessels.

Yersinia enterocolitica

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Y enterocolitica can cause an acute ileitis with a clinical picture resembling acute flare-up of Crohn's disease.

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Colonoscopic findings in Y enterocolitica enterocolitis include involvement of the terminal ileum in almost all patients and, less commonly, the ileocaecal valve, the caecum, and the ascending colon. Small, rounded, or oval mucosal elevations with or without small ulcers in the terminal ileum are suggestive of Y enterocolitica enterocolitis.

Stool cultures and serological tests confirm the diagnosis.[74]

Intestinal tuberculosis

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Can present with weight loss, abdominal pain, and fever, and can cause a terminal ileitis on imaging.

Consider in patients from endemic areas who present with suggestive symptoms, such weight loss and night sweats.[70]

There may be features of tuberculosis (TB) infection elsewhere in the body (e.g., cough, haemoptysis).

INVESTIGATIONS

There may be lymphadenopathy on imaging investigations.

Ileocaecal biopsy shows caseating granulomata.

TB infection may be found on tissue staining for acid-fast bacilli, TB culture, or TB polymerase chain reaction, alone or in combination, although yield is low.[69]

Amoebiasis

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Amoebiasis can mimic Crohn's disease of the ileum and caecum.

Recent travel to endemic areas is highly suggestive.

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Stool testing for parasites.

Cytomegalovirus colitis

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Immunocompromised patients, including those who have received solid organ transplant, patients on long-term immunosuppressants, or patients with HIV infection / AIDS.

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Biopsy should be sent for histological examination, antigen detection, and viral culture. Classic histological findings include giant cells with cytomegaly and large ovoid or pleomorphic nuclei containing basophilic inclusions.

Colorectal cancer

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Increased risk associated with increasing age and a positive family history.

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CT scan may show primary or secondary disease.

Colonoscopy provides tissue for histological diagnosis.

Diverticular disease

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Commonly presents with left-sided abdominal pain in patients aged 50 years and older.

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CT scan shows evidence of diverticular disease with surrounding inflammation.

Acute appendicitis

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Younger patients.

Pain may start in the peri-umbilical area, with subsequent localisation to the right lower quadrant.

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CT scan showing inflammation of appendix only.

Ectopic pregnancy

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All acute presentations with abdominal pain in women of childbearing age should be considered to be due to an ectopic pregnancy until proven otherwise.

May be a history of amenorrhoea, known positive pregnancy test, vaginal bleeding.

INVESTIGATIONS

Urine and or serum beta human chorionic gonadotrophin positive.

Pelvic ultrasound may identify a tubal pregnancy.

If rupture is suspected and the patient is haemodynamically unstable, urgent resuscitation and surgery is required.

Pelvic inflammatory disease

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Vaginal discharge, dyspareunia, and pelvic pain.

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Pelvic ultrasonography shows inflammatory changes in the adnexae. Rarely, laparoscopic evaluation is needed.

Endometriosis

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Patients usually have cyclical symptoms starting with the menses.

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Laparoscopy demonstrates the presence of endometrial tissues in the peritoneal cavity.

Irritable bowel syndrome

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Chronic change in stool frequency, form, or appearance. Commonly associated with abdominal bloating and passing mucus per rectum.

Spasmodic abdominal pain is often relieved by defecation.

Crohn's disease (CD) should be suspected if symptoms are progressive or include bloody or nocturnal diarrhoea.

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Screening blood tests show no evidence of inflammation.

Biopsy does not show typical features of CD.

Faecal calprotectin can help to differentiate inflammatory bowel disease from irritable bowel syndrome, but is not specific for CD.[71]

Microscopic colitis

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Chronic watery, non-bloody diarrhoea.

Other common symptoms include faecal urgency, faecal incontinence, and nocturnal stools.

More common in patients aged >50 years and in women.

INVESTIGATIONS

Diagnosis is confirmed by ileocolonoscopy with biopsies from the right and left colon.[98]​ Colonic mucosa has a normal or near-normal gross appearance. Biopsy demonstrates collagenous colitis (i.e., thickened subepithelial collagenous band of ≥10 micrometres (normal <5 micrometres) or lymphocytic colitis (i.e., increased number of intraepithelial lymphocytes of ≥20 per 100 surface epithelial cells (normal <5 micrometres). Both types show an increased inflammatory infiltrate in the lamina propria.[98]

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