Clinical Study of Crohn’s Disease Uses Ultrasound to Detect Signs of Trouble

A new study aims to help doctors pinpoint the progression of bowel damage — and keep patients out of the hospital.

1:00 PM

Author | Rene Wisely

Patients with Crohn's disease receive a lot of poking and prodding, so the potential to monitor progression of inflammatory bowel disease simply by listening to their guts seems like a dream.

MORE FROM MICHIGAN: Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

A team of University of Michigan researchers is doing just that.

Experts at U-M's Inflammatory Bowel Disease Program have launched a study using nonlinearity ultrasound, a noninvasive test in which sound waves monitor bowel stiffness and measure accumulated bowel damage.

Because Crohn's is characterized by flare-ups, with inflammation coming and going, fibrous scar tissue can build up inside the intestinal walls over time. Repeat episodes may narrow the intestines to the point of blockage.

Such obstruction can prompt emergency surgery either a bowel resection or a strictureplasty to treat the diseased area.

That's why this study is using ultrasound technology to help identify and measure bowel damage before it leads to blockages.

The concept was tested on diseased laboratory animals with encouraging results. Now, U-M is seeking more Crohn's patients to sign up for monitoring.

A preventive approach

Another goal of the study is to stop revolving-door hospital visits because of flare-ups, says Peter Higgins, M.D., Ph.D., M.Sc., a Michigan Medicine gastroenterologist and director of the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Program at U-M.

Steroids are a common treatment, he notes, but they come with major side effects.

Symptoms and treatment of inflammation, meanwhile, can disrupt a patient's life.

SEE ALSO: How 3-D Printing Makes Ostomy More Personal (and Less Problematic)

"You miss a lot of life with repeated hospitalizations for blockages," Higgins says. "If we can identify severe bowel damage, a timely planned surgery is often the best option. A scheduled, elective surgery can often use a minimally invasive technique, laparoscopy, when you're feeling healthy, which shortens recovery."

Which is why the ultrasound monitoring could be a simple and painless preventive measure. Performed during an office visit, it requires no needles, medication, fasting or bowel preparation.

Patients in the ultrasound study are checked every three months for progression of bowel damage. The researchers hope to learn how to identify severe bowel damage and predict which patients will need surgery.

To learn more about the study, call 734-615-4843 or email [email protected].


More Articles About: Digestive Health Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Crohn's and Colitis Ultrasound Digestive (GI) Conditions
Health Lab word mark overlaying blue cells
Health Lab

Explore a variety of health care news & stories by visiting the Health Lab home page for more articles.

Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

Stay Informed

Want top health & research news weekly? Sign up for Health Lab’s newsletters today!

Subscribe
Featured News & Stories person getting a closeup ultrasound
Health Lab
4 times you might need an ultrasound and didn’t know
An article about ultrasounds and in what situations to use them in, provided by radiologists.
Kid holding pumpkin bowl of candy in skeleton costume
Health Lab
Is chocolate safe for people with IBS?
With Halloween and the holiday season right around the corner, people with IBS may want to reconsider choosing to eat chocolate.
close up of yellow cells and blue greenish teal background
Health Lab
An ultrasound-activated hydrogel for steady, sustained drug delivery
Researchers have developed a new composite hydrogel capable of achieving sustained, zero-order drug release using ultrasound as a trigger.
machine beige black
Health Lab
Histotripsy liver tumor trial successful, early clinical adoption recommended
The #HOPE4LIVER trials, testing the safety efficacy of histotripsy as a treatment for primary and metastatic liver tumors, met its goals for technical success and safety. An expert explains more about it in this article.
bacteria blue yellow
Health Lab
New guideline for Helicobacter pylori includes change to primary treatment recommendation
The American Journal of Gastroenterology has published a new guideline on the treatment of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) Infection. 
balancing scale of food and hand reaching purple background yellow scale
Health Lab
All FODMAPs aren’t created equal: working toward alternative diets to manage IBS
Two studies from Michigan Medicine may provide hope for patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) struggling to implement the traditional low-FODMAP diet.