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New cross-sectional imaging in IBD.

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Cross-sectional imaging, namely ultrasound, CT and MR enterography, complements clinical and endoscopic monitoring of activity and complications in IBD, and emerging new radiological technologies may have clinical applications in the near future. This review offers an update on the potential role of these new imaging methods in the management of IBD.

RECENT FINDINGS: Specific MR techniques [diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) and magnetization transfer] allow accurate detection of inflammation (DWI and maybe DKI) and fibrosis (magnetization transfer) in Crohn's disease, without the need of intravenous gadolinium administration. ultrasonography developments (elastography, contrast-enhanced ultrasonography, small intestine contrast ultrasonography and multispectral optoacoustic tomography) are promising techniques for evaluation of fibrosis (elastography) and inflammation (contrast ultrasonography). Dose-reduction techniques in CT allow similar quality imaging and diagnostic accuracy with lower radiation exposure. Hybrid imaging (PET/MR and PET/CT) hold promise for grading inflammation in Crohn's disease.

SUMMARY: The potential benefits of new cross-sectional imaging techniques in IBD include better inflammation grading, such as identification of mild degree of activity, which may be relevant whenever assessing response to treatment and, of uttermost importance, accurate preoperative detection and grading of fibrosis in stricturing Crohn's disease, facilitating surgical vs. medical therapeutic decisions.

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