Review article: The advent of capsule endoscopy - A not-so-futuristic approach to obscure gastrointestinal bleeding

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Abstract

Capsule endoscopy is a new, wireless, endoscopic examination of the small intestine. To date, two small clinical trials have been reported utilizing capsule endoscopy in patients with obscure gastrointestinal bleeding, and have shown its superiority to push enteroscopy in diagnosing the cause of blood loss. No outcome studies have been reported. This paper proposes a change in practice guidelines for obscure bleeding. It is our opinion that, in the future, with the advent of wireless capsule endoscopy, the evaluation of patients with obscure gastrointestinal bleeding will be very different from the practice of medicine today. We believe that capsule endoscopy will become the first-line method for the evaluation of patients with obscure bleeding, once upper endoscopy and colonoscopy have been shown to be negative. In patients with active bleeding, capsule endoscopy will confirm the small bowel as the site of bleeding, providing a location, or, if the study is negative for the small intestine, may indicate that the bleeding is either colonic or gastric in origin. In a patient with active bleeding within the small intestine, the capsule will guide further evaluation and therapy. A patient with a small bowel tumour detected by capsule endoscopy will proceed directly to laparoscopic surgery. If the site of bleeding is identified in the proximal small bowel and there is no mass, push enteroscopy will be used to reidentify the site and cauterize it. A distal small bowel site will require surgical intervention, coupled with intraoperative enteroscopy. Should the patient be too sick to undergo surgery, medical therapy utilizing hormonal agents will be considered. A colonic site will be evaluated by colonoscopy. In patients with a more occult or intermittent type of bleeding and in those whose upper endoscopies and colonoscopies are negative, capsule endoscopy will be used similarly to identify a bleeding lesion and thereby direct subsequent testing or treatment.

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APA

Lewis, B., & Goldfarb, N. (2003, May 1). Review article: The advent of capsule endoscopy - A not-so-futuristic approach to obscure gastrointestinal bleeding. Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2036.2003.01556.x

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