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Erschienen in: BMC Gastroenterology 1/2015

Open Access 01.12.2015 | Research article

Utility of the diffusion-weighted imaging for activity evaluation in Crohn’s disease patients underwent magnetic resonance enterography

verfasst von: Feng Qi, Shen Jun, Qiao Yu Qi, Peng Jiang Chen, Geng Xiao Chuan, Zhu Jiong, Xu Jian Rong

Erschienen in: BMC Gastroenterology | Ausgabe 1/2015

Abstract

Background

Cross-sectional imaging techniques as magnetic resonance enterography (MRE) may offer additional information on transmural inflammation, stricturing and fistulising complications in Crohn’s disease (CD). The purpose of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) combined with Diffusion-weighted Imaging (DWI) and MRE for determination of inflammation in small bowel CD.

Methods

MR imaging examination was performed with a GE Signa EXCITE 3.0 T MRI scanner. The optimal b value in DWI with a learning cohort of patients was determined. The diagnostic accuracy for active lesions and disease activity were accessed by MRE combined with DWI.

Results

The b value 800 s/mm2 group showed the highest diagnostic sensitivity (74.19%) for diagnostic assessment of active Crohn’s lesions on DWI. MRE combined with DWI showed the highest sensitivity (93.55%), specificity (89.47%) and diagnostic accuracy (92%) compared with MRE or DWI alone. The segmental MR score (MR-score-S) showed a significantly positive correlation with the Capsule Endoscopy Crohn’s Disease Activity Index Score (CECDAI-S) (r = 0.717, p < 0.01). The total MR score (MR-score-T) showed significant association with C-reactive protein (CRP) (r = 0.445, p = 0.019) and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) (r = 0.688, p < 0.01).

Conclusions

MRE combined with DWI improves the diagnostic accuracy for active lesions and correlates the endoscopic disease activity. MRE with DWI could represent a non-invasive tool in assessing active inflammation in CD.
Hinweise
Feng Qi and Shen Jun contributed equally to this work.

Competing interests

The authors declared that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

Each author had participated sufficiently to take public responsibility for its content. FQ, ZJ and XJR were guarantors of integrity of the entire study, and contributed to the study concepts and design. Feng Qi and Shen Jun were contributed to the literature research and clinical studies. GXC, QYQ and PJC were contributed to the experimental studies/data analysis. FQ prepared the manuscript and Shen Jun was contributed to the manuscript editing. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Background

Crohn’s disease (CD) is characterized by chronic inflammation with a relapsing and remitting natural history. Treatment is generally effective in relieving clinical symptoms. However, preliminary evidence has suggested that therapeutic strategy for endoscopic remission might be associated with better outcome [1]. Mucosal healing (MH) or deep remission emerges as the therapeutic endpoint in patients with CD, especially in severe or complicated cases. Therefore, monitoring the disease with endoscopy and cross-sectional imaging is proposed to assess MH. Endoscopy allows direct visualization of the mucosa and acquisition of biopsies. In CD, although endoscopy is an invasive procedure and expensive in some countries, it is nearly the ‘golden’ standard for disease activity monitoring of luminal lesions. To determine the severity and therapeutic responses based on normalized, endoscopic manifestation, a variety of disease activity indices have been developed over decades [2,3]. For small bowel CD, the advent of capsule endoscopy has improved our understanding of the lining of the small bowel. Extensive consensus has established that capsule endoscopy visualize the whole small bowel, and it help to assess the small-bowel severity in CD [4]. However, capsule endoscopy also shows some limitations. The focal length of the vision is too short to measure the size of lesions reliably. However capsule endoscopy is not possible in stricturing disease, hence radiological imaging is usually required.
Cross-sectional imaging techniques as computed tomography enterography (CTE) and MRE may offer additional information on transmural inflammation, stricturing and fistulising complications [5]. CTE delineate the extent and severity of bowel wall inflammation, apart from detecting extra-luminal findings [6]. However, the increased spatial resolution of CT with new multidetectors carries along with the greater dose of ionizing radiation. In fact, effective dose of radiation for CTE is nearly five times higher than small bowel follow through [7]. MRE is preferred for the evaluation of the gastrointestinal tract because of the absence of ionizing radiation, along with the similar sensitivity and diagnostic accuracy of luminal and extraluminal lesions [8,9]. Most of the recent researches focused on the inflammatory activity of involved segments using gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted sequence for evaluation of CD. MRE signs of inflammatory activity in the bowel segments showed a good correlation with the presence and severity of endoscopic lesions [10,11]. MRE can measure intestinal thickness, enhancement after contrast injection, edema and ulceration or even more sophisticated measure as diffusion weighted imaging (DWI). DWI derives its image contrast from differences in the motion of water molecules between tissues [12]. DWI has been reported for colonic lesions in active CD, which could avoid the use of gadolinium injection [13]. Thus, the absence of gadolinium-induced nephrogenic systemic fibrosis indicates that DWI might be the proper method for long time follow-up in CD.
To quantify MRI assessment in each segment, Magnetic Resonance Index of Activity (MaRIA) is used and gets the satisfactory consistency with Crohn’s Disease Endoscopic Index of Severity (CDEIS). However, only few studies were found to evaluate small bowel inflammation using DWI to date. Therefore, the purpose of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of MRI combined with DWI and MRE for determination of inflammation in small bowel CD.

Methods

Patients

From September 2010 to September 2012, a total of thirty-six consecutive active CD patients were included in our restrospective study, including nineteen males and seventeen females (Table 1). All patients underwent both MR examination and single/double balloon enteroscopy within the same week. All patients gave written informed consent to participate in the present study. The ethic approval was provided by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) of the Ren Ji Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
Table 1
Characteristics of all patients
 
Mean ± deviation
Range (min, max)
Age (year)
27 ± 10
13, 63
Course of disease (month)
34 ± 30
1, 122
Leucocyte (10^9/L)
7.17 ± 2.66
2.72, 16.11
Erythrocyte (10^9/L)
4.32 ± 0.68
2.67, 5.58
Hemoglobin (g/L)
112.38 ± 20.67
60, 150
Platelet (10^9/L)
304.47 ± 97.02
103, 582
High sensitive CRP (mg/L)
22.20 ± 23.16
0.7, 98
Blood sedimentation (mm/h)
27.26 ± 19.22
1, 80
Albumin (g/L)
35.0 ± 5.20
26.2, 45.5
The criteria of enrollment included: Harvey-Bradshaw Crohn’s Disease Activity Index > 4; C-reactive protein (CRP) > 8 mg/L or erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) > 20 mm/h; Ulcers in at least one segment of bowels. The criteria of exclusion were intolerance or contraindication to undergo single/double balloon enteroscopy or MRE; Pregnancy; Active infection.

MRE protocol

MR imaging examination was performed with a GE Signa EXCITE 3.0 T MRI scanner (GE HealthCare, Milwaukee, WI, USA). Patients fasted for over 8 hours before examinations and took 2000 ml solution of Polyethylene Glycol Electrolyte (PGE) powder (Wanhe Inc., Shenzhen, China) for bowel preparation. Forty five minutes before scanning, additional 1000 ml PGE solution was administered orally to each patient for small bowel distention. Scopolamine 10 mg (Shanghai Xinyi Pharmaceuticals Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China) was administered intramuscularly 10 minutes before the examination.
After acquiring standard three-plane scout images with supine position, sequences were obtained from the abdomen and pelvis using an eight-channel, phased-array body coil. All sequences except T1W imaging were scanned with respiratory-triggering method. T2-weighted single shot fast spin-echo images (ssFSE) were acquired in axial and coronal plane. The scan parameters were as follows: TR/TE, 2000-3400/68 msec; slice thickness, 5 mm; interslice gap, 0 mm; matrix, 384*192; FOV, 42*25 cm; NEX, 0.6; SENSE factor, 2. Axial T1-weighted three-dimensional fast spoiled gradient echo (FSPGR) was acquired with breath-holding technique: TR/TE, 310/2.5 msec; slice thickness, 6 mm; interslice gap, 0 mm; matrix, 288*192; FOV, 35*25 cm; NEX, 0.5; SENSE factor, 2.
Scan parameters of DWI were as follows: TR/TE, 5820-6200/74-78 msec; slice thickness, 6 mm; interslice gap, 2 mm; matrix, 128*96; FOV, 40*28 cm; NEX, 4. The frequency direction was left to right. Diffusion-encoding gradients were applied as 5 b values from 0 to 2500 s/mm2 (0, 800, 1500, 2000 and 2500 s/mm2) along the three orthogonal directions of motion-probing gradients. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps were automatically constructed on a pixel-by-pixel basis.
A 3D gradient echo T1 sequence (LAVA) was conducted before and after intravenous administration of Magnevist (0.1 ml/kg; Bayer Vital Gmbh, Germany) at a rate of 3 ml/s for dynamic study in coronal plane (arterial phase 30 s, portal phase 70 s and post-equilibrium phase 90 s after injection). TR/TE, 3.3/1.5 msec; slice thickness, 2.4 mm; interslice gap, −1.8 mm; matrix, 256*288; FOV, 40*40 cm; NEX, 0.7.
The acquisition time of the entire examination for each patient was approximately 30 minutes.

MRI evaluation

Determine the optimal b value in DWI with a learning cohort of patients

Qualitative analysis
The manifestation of intestinal anatomic structure on DWI was evaluated on a three-point scale as follows: 0 = both inflammatory and normal intestinal wall structure was clear, 1 = inflammatory intestinal wall structure was clear while partial normal intestinal wall structure was vague, 2 = only partial positive or negative intestinal wall structure could be identified. The diagnostic efficacy of inflammatory lesions on DW images would be evaluated and compared with the results of enteroscopy.
Quantitative analysis
The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) in all four different b value groups would be measured. Image noise was measured from a large area (approximately 260 cm2) outside the abdomen parenchyma and defined as the standard deviation of background signal intensity. The signal contrast and ADCs would be measured on both normal and inflammatory bowel wall when these images were properly magnified, and ROI areas would be determined as maximum. On DW images, ROIs were placed on the segments where the signal was the most significant.

MRE combined with DWI improves the diagnostic accuracy for active lesions

Three different protocols were adopted for image evaluation in this session. Protocol A: only DW imaging was used; protocol B: only (MRE) imaging was used, including T1WI, T2WI, and LAVA; protocol C: both DW imaging and MRE imaging were used. In protocol A, the intestinal segment would be evaluated as positive when it demonstrated significant high signal intensity on DWI and low signal intensity on ADC map. In protocol B, the segments would be evaluated as positive then it demonstrated high signal intensity on T2WI, wall thickening more than 3 mm and apparent enhancement in LAVA imaging. In protocol C, the segments would be evaluated as positive when it appeared abnormal on both DW and MRE imaging. The b value adopted here would depend on the outcome we gained in the part of “Determine the optimal b value in DWI with a learning cohort of patients”. The diagnostic effect of these three reading protocols would be compared with the results of enteroscopy.

MRE combined with DWI correlates the endoscopic disease activity

Image evaluation was performed on the GE workstation (GE Healthcare, AW4.2). All images were evaluated by two experienced gastrointestinal radiologists (4 and 6 years of experience) who were blinded to clinical symptoms and results of enteroscopy. For any discrepancies in the data analysis, a joint reading session was performed to obtain consensus. In DW images, the intestinal segment would be evaluated as positive when it demonstrated significant high signal intensity on DWI and low signal intensity on ADC map. The b value adopted here would depend on the outcome we gained in the part of “Determine the optimal b value in DWI with a learning cohort of patients”. The small intestinal segments were defined with coronal T2WI sequence: duodenum, jejunum (left upper abdomen), proximal ileum (middle and left lower abdomen), distal ileum (right lower abdomen and pelvis) and terminal ileum (10 cm up to ileal valve). Based on a comprehensive review of the literature, eight radiological signs were studied: (1) DWI hyper-intensity, (2) layer differentiation of DWI hyper-intensity, (3) bowel wall enhancement after intravenous contrast medium administration, (4) differentiation between the mucosae-submucosa complex and the muscularis propria, (5) bowel wall thickening, (6) mesenteric edema, (7) the presence of ulcers, and (8) the presence of polypoid hyperplasia. Furthermore, the presence or absence of a radiological sign in a given segment was rated ‘1’ or ‘0’, respectively. A modified MR scoring system was adopted: The segmental MR score (MR-score-S) was calculated as the sum of the numerical values obtained for the eight radiological signs for a given segment. The total MR-score (MR-score-T) was calculated as the sum of the MR-score-S in individual patient.

Endoscopic evaluation

The interval between MR examination and single/double balloon enteroscopy (SBE/DBE) was less than one weeks. Mean oral intubation depth was about 250 cm and Mean anal intubation depth was about 129 cm respectively. Biopsy specimens were taken from suspected lesions.
Endoscopic images were evaluated by two experienced gastroenterologists. Due to the lack of scoring system for enteroscopy, the severity and extent of lesions in small bowel were assessed by the Capsule Endoscopy Crohn’s Disease Activity Index (CECDAI) [14]. For individual patient, five intestinal segments were defined: duodenum, jejunum, proximal ileum, distal ileum and terminal ileum. The segmental CECDAI score (CECDAI-S) was calculated in each given segment, and the total CECDAI score (CECDAI-T) was defined as the sum of the CECDAI score in a patient.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 11.5. Quantitative variables are represented as the mean ± standard deviation, and discrete variables were represented as frequencies or percentages. The evaluation of CNR, SNR and ADCs weere performed using one-way ANOVA. The diagnostic accuracy was performed using Chi-Square comparison. The correlations between MR scores and endoscopic scores, as well as clinical and biological markers of disease activity were calculated by Spearmen rank correlation test.

Results

Characteristics of included subjects

In current study, a total of 100 intestinal segments were evaluated (36 terminal ileum segments, 33 distal ileum segments, 25 proximal ileum segments, 5 jejunal segments and 1 duodenal segment), which included 62 positive segments and 38 negative segments. Sixteen patients were diagnosed with complication: 3 cases of internal fistula, 5 cases of abdominal abscess, 4 cases of anal fistula and 4 cases of anal abscess.

Determine the optimal b value in DWI with a learning cohort of patients

SNR and CNR decreased remarkably when b value 2000 s/mm2 and 2500 s/mm2 was adopted. There was significant differences existed in SNR (F = 17.074, p < 0.01) and CNR (F = 14.920, p < 0.01) when b value as 800 s/mm2 and 1500 s/mm2, respectively. The ADCs of the inflammatory intestinal segments were significantly lower compared with those in the normal segments using all four b values (p < 0.01) (Figure 1). It was indicated that no matter what b value was chosen, the ADC difference between inflammatory and normal bowel segments was significant, and it was hard to tell which b value was better.
Considering the optimal image quality of DWI, the b value 800 s/mm2 was adopted as scale 0. When b value 1500 s/mm2 was selected, 7 cases were evaluated as scale 1 and 29 cases as scale 0. When b value 2000 s/mm2 was selected, 11 cases were evaluated as scale 1 and the other 25 cases were evaluated as scale 2. When b value 2500 s/mm2 was selected, all cases were evaluated as scale 2 (Figure 2).
The b value 800 s/mm2 group showed the highest diagnostic sensitivity (74.19%) for diagnostic assessment of active Crohn’s lesions on DWI. However, the specificity was quite low in b value 800 s/mm2 group (39.47%). Among four different b groups, the diagnostic accuracy was similar (all p > 0.05) (Figure 3).

MRE combined with DWI improves the diagnostic accuracy for active lesions

The diagnostic accuracy of inflammatory segments using three reading protocols was also assessed. MRE combined with DWI showed the highest sensitivity (93.55%), specificity (89.47%) and diagnostic accuracy (92%) compared with MRE or DWI alone (Table 2). The combination of MRE and DWI could improve diagnostic sensitivity and specificity (Figures 4 and 5).
Table 2
Diagnostic assessment of active Crohn’s lesions
Reading protocol
TP
FP
FN
TN
Sensitivity
Specificity
Diagnostic accuracy
A
42
14
20
24
74.19%
63.16%
66%
B
51
10
11
28
82.26%
73.68%
79%
C
58
4
4
34
93.55%
89.47%
92%

MRE combined with DWI correlates the endoscopic disease activity

In segmental analysis, MR-score-S showed a significantly positive correlation with CECDAI-S (r = 0.717, p < 0.01). Similarly, MR-score-T was found to be significantly correlated with CECDAI-T (r = 0.535, p < 0.01) in individual patient (Figure 6).
Moreover, to determine the specific signs predicting clinical and endoscopic disease activity, Receiver Operator Curves (ROC) were used. The Area Under the Receiver Operator Curve (AUROC) indicated that bowel wall enhancement was the optimal predictor of inflammation (AUROC = 0.87) with the satisfactory sensitivity (79.4%) and specificity (94.3%). Besides, DWI hyper-intensity (AUROC = 0.83) and bowel wall thickening (AUROC = 0.80) could also predict active inflammation pretty well. Interestingly, It was demonstrated that the layer differentiation of DWI hyper-intensity and differentiation between the mucosaesubmucosa complex and the muscularis propria presented the perfect diagnostic specificity (Figure 7).
Then, we focused on the correlation between MR findings and clinical disease activity index or biomarkers. Although MR-score-T showed significant association with CRP (r = 0.445, p = 0.019) and ESR (r = 0.688, p < 0.01), we could not find significant association between MR-score-T and CDAI (r = 0.299, p = 0.146).

Discussion

CD is a chronic inflammatory disorder which may affect any part of the gastrointestinal tract, frequently involving the small and large bowel. It is difficult to completely observe the whole small bowel with conventional endoscopy and MRI is now increasingly used. DWI has the capability to detect inflammatory lesion and its utility in CD activity has been assessed in several studies, while few papers ever discussed the reason of b value selection. Oussalah et al. [13] reported the dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) and DWI with b values 0 and 600 s/mm2. It was also reported that three b values (0, 100 and 800 s/mm2) could be used with axial images through the upper and lower abdomen obtained in Crohn’s disease [15]. Neubauer et al. [16] reported the utility of DWI in children and young adults suffering from Crohn’s disease with b values 50 and 800 s/mm2. In our study, we compared four different b values and it turned out that 800 s/mm2 was the best choice in this MRE-DWI examination. Not only the image with b value 800 s/mm2 had the best SNR and CNR, but it showed the highest diagnostic sensitivity (74.19%) and the diagnostic accuracy of it was similar to others.
SBE and DBE can provide high-quality images of the small intestinal mucosa, which enables the gastroenterologists, receive integral impression and evaluation of involved small intestine immediately. Due to the lack of scoring system for enteroscopy, the severity and extent of lesions in small bowel were assessed by the CECDAI in the present study. CECDAI can diagnose CD, exclude normal mucosal breaks, identify damage induced by nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, measure disease activity and severity, assess therapeutic response for clinical trials, and determine medical management for the patient with small-bowel CD. However, CECDAI is not suitable for patients with suspicious stenosis or obstruction due to the contraindication of capsule endoscopy (CE).
Some studies had proposed to evaluate disease activity with scoring systems based on combination of MRI features [13,17]. MRE is noninvasive, and the intestinal wall adjacent to the obstruction could be clearly displayed. In CD, the MR-score-T has been indicated to correlate with the endoscopic disease activity, even in colonography without bowel preparation [13]. In the present study, we found the similar evidence that both MR-score-S and MR-score-T were correlated with CECDAI. And bowel wall enhancement shows the best predictive value for active inflammation in our study. The level of bowel wall enhancement after intravenous administration of gadolinium is the single, most reliable MRI criterion for disease activity because that it reflects wall vascularity and vessel permeability, which increased in active inflammation [18,19]. Indeed, several studies have proved bowel wall thickening as an independent predictor of inflammation in CD [13,20]. Interestingly, some MR features as the wall thickening showed the lower value to assess inflammatory activity in a few reports [21]. We noticed that without proper bowel preparation and luminal distension, the wall thickening caused by constriction sometimes could be easily confused with inflammatory lesion even after contrast injection. In fact, normal signal intensity of thickened wall could appear in chronic inflammation or even normal bowel wall without properly distention [22]. Sometimes hyper-enhancement of the mucosa may be the only manifestation of active inflammation without any significant bowel thickening, which can be found in patients with recurrent CD after fibrotic reaction [23].
In our study, DWI hyper-intensity predicted inflammatory activity pretty well, which was closed to bowel wall enhancement. Fortunately, DWI hyper-intensity has been found similar possibility on predicting disease active in colon [13]. The layer differentiation of DWI hyper-intensity could be observed in all cases with active inflammation. MR feature of differentiation between the mucosaesubmucosa complex and the muscularis propria also showed the similar pattern in our study. The specific mechanism is still to be determined. The inner layer with higher signal might indicate granulomatous or fibrotic reaction, and the outer layer with lower signal might indicate bowel wall edema based on pathologic findings of CD.
The MaRIA score was recently prospectively validated and subsequently considered as the benchmark for assessing inflammatory activity in MRI for ileocolonic CD [10,24]. Wall thickening, relative contrast enhancement, edema and ulcer were the main parameters while no DWI factor was included. Rimola J et al. suggested that the creation of MaRIA-DWI score could be the better activity index for small bowel CD [25]. In this score system, ADC value was added as a new parameter. Unfortunately, the data they got was not compared with gold standard and the ADC value itself could be variable according to different b value or MR scanner. So we adopt the scoring system using by Oussalah et al. and added other radiological signs in it which we named “modified MR scoring system”, which we expected could be more stable and dependable.
Although the MR-score-T was correlated with both ESR and CRP, it did not show significant correlation with clinical disease activity index in CD. The CDAI score reflects patients’ general condition including intestinal and parenteral manifestations. It’s a relatively subjective evaluation score depending much more on patients’ chief complain than clinical, endoscopic or radiologic test, which might cause the bias between MR-score-T and CDAI score. Furthermore, it should be noted that MRI could not replace endoscopy in evaluating disease activity because of its difficulty in assessing mucosal status. However, MRI could be adapted as a useful technique for long-time follow-up.
There were several limitations to this study. First, the correlation between bowel wall ADCs and other MRI markers of disease activity were not well investigated at present. Although ADC of DWI has preliminarily been demonstrated as an radiological, disease activity marker in CD [26,27], sometimes endoscopic finding could not confirm the ADCs findings in the same segments of inflammatory bowel. Second, in CD, both inflammation and fibrosis usually coexisted in the same bowel segments [28,29]. However, it’s still very difficult to identify whether thickened bowel wall contains substantial fibrosis with these imaging sequences.

Conclusions

In conclusion, when DWI was combined with MRE for CD activity evaluation, b value 800 s/mm2 was recommended as the optimal DWI scanning parameter because of its good image quality and high diagnostic sensitivity of lesion detection. When diagnostic accuracy of active lesion was concerned, it was concluded that the combination of DWI and MRE showed the highest sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy compared with MRE or DWI alone. At the same time, the MR score obtained from both DWI and MRE radiological characteristics had showed a significantly positive correlation with CECDAI. Among all the MR score signs, bowel wall enhancement was the optimal predictor of active inflammation.

Acknowledgements

This study was funded by the Shanghai Leading Academic Discipline Project (S30203). We acknowledged Dr. Yan Yun Qi for his contribution of patients' data acquisition to this study.
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Competing interests

The authors declared that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

Each author had participated sufficiently to take public responsibility for its content. FQ, ZJ and XJR were guarantors of integrity of the entire study, and contributed to the study concepts and design. Feng Qi and Shen Jun were contributed to the literature research and clinical studies. GXC, QYQ and PJC were contributed to the experimental studies/data analysis. FQ prepared the manuscript and Shen Jun was contributed to the manuscript editing. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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Metadaten
Titel
Utility of the diffusion-weighted imaging for activity evaluation in Crohn’s disease patients underwent magnetic resonance enterography
verfasst von
Feng Qi
Shen Jun
Qiao Yu Qi
Peng Jiang Chen
Geng Xiao Chuan
Zhu Jiong
Xu Jian Rong
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2015
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
BMC Gastroenterology / Ausgabe 1/2015
Elektronische ISSN: 1471-230X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12876-015-0235-0

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