Diagnosis of ulcerative colitis
A gold standard method for diagnosis of Ulcerative Colitis is not currently available. However, diagnosis requires, at a minimum, negative stool culture and some form of sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy. (1)
The diagnosis of ulcerative colitis is achieved through a combination of medical history, clinical evaluation and supported by the typical endoscopic and histological findings:
- proctosigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy with characteristic changes of ulcerative colitis (loss of the typical vascular pattern, granularity, friability, and ulceration)
- biopsy - to distinguish UC from infectious colitis
- negative stool examination - for infectious causes
Initial laboratory investigation methods for patients with active disease at presentation include:
- full blood count - may reveal thrombocytosis, anaemia, leucocytosis
- inflammatory markers (CRP or ESR)
- electrolytes
- liver function tests
- a stool sample for microbiological testing (1)
A number of autoantibodies especially perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (pANCA) have been identified in patients with UC. (approximately 50-60% of patients are found to be positive for pANCA). Due to the low sensitivity of pANCA for the diagnosis of UC it cannot be used as a diagnostic tool (1)
Reference
- Rubin DT, Ananthakrishnan AN, Siegel CA, et al. ACG clinical guideline: ulcerative colitis in adults. Am J Gastroenterol. 2019 Mar;114(3):384-413.
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