Difference between revisions of "Lymphocytic colitis"

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{{ Infobox diagnosis
| Name      = {{PAGENAME}}
| Image      =
| Width      =
| Caption    =
| Micro      = intraepithelial lymphocytes (>20/100 enterocytes), none or rare [[PMN]]s, no architectural distortion, no subepithelial collagen band
| Subtypes  =
| LMDDx      = [[collagenous colitis]], [[infectious colitis]]
| Stains    =
| IHC        =
| EM        =
| Molecular  =
| IF        =
| Gross      =
| Grossing  =
| Site      = [[colon]]
| Assdx      = autoimmune diseases ([[celiac disease]], [[diabetes mellitus]], [[thyroid]] disorders, [[arthritis]])
| Syndromes  =
| Clinicalhx =
| Signs      =
| Symptoms  = diarrhea
| Prevalence =
| Bloodwork  =
| Rads      =
| Endoscopy  = normal
| Prognosis  =
| Other      =
| ClinDDx    = [[irritable bowel syndrome]]
}}
{{ Infobox external links
{{ Infobox external links
| Name          = {{PAGENAME}}
| Name          = {{PAGENAME}}

Revision as of 00:05, 1 August 2013

Lymphocytic colitis
Diagnosis in short

LM intraepithelial lymphocytes (>20/100 enterocytes), none or rare PMNs, no architectural distortion, no subepithelial collagen band
LM DDx collagenous colitis, infectious colitis
Site colon

Associated Dx autoimmune diseases (celiac disease, diabetes mellitus, thyroid disorders, arthritis)
Symptoms diarrhea
Endoscopy normal
Clin. DDx irritable bowel syndrome
Lymphocytic colitis
External resources
EHVSC 10184

Lymphocytic colitis, abbreviated LC, is a type of microscopic colitis. It has a characteristic clinical presentation and no apparent endoscopic changes.

General

Presentation:

  • Chronic diarrhea, non-bloody.[1]
  • Lymphocytic colitis may be related to collagenous colitis.
    • It is hypothesized that these conditions may be the same pathology at different time points.[1]

Notes:

Epidemiology

  • Age: a disease of adults - usually 50s.
  • Sex:
    • LC males ~= females,[1]
    • CC females:males = 20:1.[1]
  • Drugs are associated with LC and CC.
    • NSAIDs - posulated association/weak association,
    • SSRIs (used primarily for depression) - moderate association, dependent on specific drug.
  • Associated with autoimmune disorders - celiac disease, diabetes mellitus, thyroid disorders and arthritis.[2]
  • No increased risk of colorectal carcinoma.[2]

Treatment

  • Sometimes just follow-up.
  • Steroids - budesonide -- short-term treatment.[2]

Gross

Microscopic

Features:

  • Lots of intraepithelial lymphocytes (>=20/100 lymphocytes/surface epithelial cells[2]) and
  • Lymphocytes in the lamina propria.

Significant negatives:[3]

  • No neutrophils.
  • No crypt distortion.

DDx:

Image:

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ASCENDING COLON, BIOPSY:
- LYMPHOCYTIC COLITIS.

Micro

The sections show colonic mucosa with abundant intraepithelial lymphocytes (>20 lymphocytes/100 surface epithelial cells). The glandular architecture is within normal limits. No thickened collagen band is apparent below the epithelium.

There are no granulomas. No neutrophilic cryptitis is apparent. The epithelium matures appropriately to the surface.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 URL: http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/180664-overview. Accessed on: 31 May 2010.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Tysk C, Bohr J, Nyhlin N, Wickbom A, Eriksson S (December 2008). "Diagnosis and management of microscopic colitis". World J. Gastroenterol. 14 (48): 7280-8. PMID 19109861. http://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/14/7280.asp. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "pmid19109861" defined multiple times with different content
  3. http://hopkins-gi.nts.jhu.edu/pages/latin/templates/index.cfm?pg=disease1&disease=29&organ=6&lang_id=1