Fibrosis in ulcerative colitis: Mechanisms, features, and consequences of a neglected problem

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Abstract

Chronic intestinal inflammation and impaired tissue repair leading to intestinal fibrosis are a commonly observed complication in inflammatory bowel disease. This is particularly true for small bowel Crohn's disease. However, the development of fibrosis in ulcerative colitis has remained largely unexplored. This is surprising, given knowledge about its prevalence for decades, well described histopathologic features of fibrotic and stricturing ulcerative colitis, the relevance of the extracellular matrix for intestinal inflammation and fibrosis, and the clinical impact of fibrosis on stricture formation, motility, and the necessary discrimination from colonic malignancy. This systematic review summarizes the current knowledge of ulcerative colitis-related fibrosis, including epidemiology, basic mechanisms, histopathology, and clinical implications.

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Gordon, I. O., Agrawal, N., Goldblum, J. R., Fiocchi, C., & Rieder, F. (2014). Fibrosis in ulcerative colitis: Mechanisms, features, and consequences of a neglected problem. Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, 20(11), 2198–2206. https://doi.org/10.1097/MIB.0000000000000080

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