Endoscopy 2006; 38(6): 655
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-925098
Unusual Cases and Technical Notes
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Balantidiasis in a Patient with Suspected Crohn’s Disease

M.  Agapov1
  • 1Vladivostok Railway Hospital, Endoscopy department
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
03 March 2006 (online)

A 15-year-old boy was referred to the gastroenterology department with a 2-month history of lower abdominal pain, intermittent diarrhea, fatigue, and weight loss. He had been well until 8 weeks previously, when he had developed watery diarrhea with six or seven bowel movements per day, cramps, headache, and fatigue. Tetracycline 0.6 g b. i. d. had been prescribed for suspected infectious diarrhea. The number of bowel movements decreased to three or four per day with the treatment, but the patient began to note blood in the feces. Detailed examination showed nothing but a body mass index of 17.9 kg/m2, a temperature of 37.2 °C, mild tenderness across the lower abdomen without rebound, a positive guaiac test, mild iron-deficiency anemia, leukocytosis, and eosinophilia. Stool culture, ova, and parasites were negative. Colonoscopy revealed multiple long ulcers of various depths surrounded by congested mucosa; the diseased areas were separated by normal mucosa (Figure [1]). Multiple biopsies were taken. The rectum and the part of the small intestine examined (10 cm) were not affected. Crohn’s disease was suspected. On morphological examination, Balantidium coli was detected in the specimens taken from the ulcer margins (Figure [2]). Initiation of treatment with metronidazole 0.5 g b. i. d. led to complete clinical recovery within 5 days. A colonoscopy check-up 1 month after admission showed that the colonic mucosa had healed. Nine months after the initial presentation, the clinical, laboratory and endoscopic examination revealed nothing but a few minor scars in the colon. The important part of the differential diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) from other inflammatory disorders is the endoscopic examination. Unfortunately, infectious and parasitic colitis may be not only clinically, but also endoscopically indistinguishable from IBD [1] [2] [3]. Stool culture and microscopy do not always make it possible to exclude the possibility of infectious colitis. A morphological examination is still the most reliable test for differentiating between infectious colitis and IBD [4].

Competing interests: None

Figure 1 Colonoscopic appearance of the patient’s large bowel.

Figure 2 Balantidium coli in a specimen taken from an ulcer margin (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification × 200)

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References

  • 1 Schumacher G. First attack of inflammatory bowel disease and infectious colitis: a clinical, histological and microbiological study with special reference to early diagnosis.  Scand J Gastroenterol Suppl. 1993;  198 1-24
  • 2 Patel A S, DeRidder P H. Amebic colitis masquerading as acute inflammatory bowel disease: the role of serology in its diagnosis.  J Clin Gastroenterol. 1989;  11 407-410
  • 3 Tedesco F J, Hardin R D, Harper R N. et al . Infectious colitis endoscopically simulating inflammatory bowel disease: a prospective evaluation.  Gastrointest Endosc. 1983;  29 195-197
  • 4 Surawicz C M, Haggitt R C, Husseman M. et al . Mucosal biopsy diagnosis of colitis: acute self-limited colitis and idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease.  Gastroenterology. 1994;  107 755-763

M. Agapov, M.D.

Vladivostok Railway Hospital, Endoscopy department

Verchne-portovaia 2569003 Vladivostok, Russia

Fax: +7-4232-210227

Email: magapov@hotmail.com