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American Journal of Roentgenology, Vol 146, Issue 1, 39-43
Copyright © 1986 by American Roentgen Ray Society


Articles

Radiologic manifestations of small-bowel toxicity due to floxuridine therapy

FM Kelvin, HF Gramm, WL Gluck, and JJ Lokich

Floxuridine (5-FUDR) is an antipyrimidine used in the treatment of metastatic colorectal carcinoma. Bowel toxicity, manifested predominantly by diarrhea and abdominal pain, is one of the main complications of 5-FUDR therapy. Six patients who had received 5-FUDR infusion either by hepatic arterial or systemic intravenous routes subsequently developed severe diarrhea and were evaluated by small-bowel series. Radiographic changes were largely confined to the ileum. In four of six patients, the entire ileum or its more distal part was markedly narrowed. In the other two patients, changes consisted of thickening or effacement of the mucosal folds in the distal ileum. The symptoms of all six patients resolved after discontinuation of 5-FUDR therapy. This was accompanied by improvement in the radiographic appearance of the ileum in three patients who underwent a subsequent small-bowel series. The finding of reversible ileal changes, particularly extensive or segmental narrowing, seems to be a characteristic radiographic feature of bowel toxicity due to infusional 5-FUDR delivered by either the intraarterial or the systemic route.
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M. S. Levine, S. E. Rubesin, and I. Laufer
Pattern Approach for Diseases of Mesenteric Small Bowel on Barium Studies
Radiology, September 23, 2008; (2008) 2491071336.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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Copyright © 1986 by the American Roentgen Ray Society.