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Dive into the research topics where Eitan Scapa is active.

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Featured researches published by Eitan Scapa.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2002

Initial experience of wireless-capsule endoscopy for evaluating occult gastrointestinal bleeding and suspected small bowel pathology

Eitan Scapa; Harold Jacob; Shlomo Lewkowicz; Michal Migdal; Daniel Gat; Arkady Gluckhovski; Nurit Gutmann; Zvi Fireman

OBJECTIVE:Small bowel pathology can be diagnosed using enteroscopy (which has limitations) and by x-ray (which is not sensitive for flat lesions). For the first time ever, we used a new technique, wireless-capsule video endoscopy, to diagnose small bowel pathology. Our aim was to prove the effectiveness and safety of this technology.METHODS:We used the Given (M2A) system in 35 patients, aged 18–80 yr, who suffered from unexplained GI bleeding or in whom there was a clinical suspicion of small bowel disease. All patients had a small bowel x-ray. Patients with suspected narrowing of the bowel or a clinical suspicion of intestinal obstruction, or with a history of major abdominal surgery, were excluded from the study. No pregnant women or patients with diabetes mellitus were included.RESULTS:Abnormal findings were found in 29 of 35 (82.9%) patients. Twenty-two of 29 (75.9%) patients had significant pathological findings explaining their clinical situation. Diagnostic yield was therefore 62.9% (22 of 35 patients). Among the various findings, the capsule detected ulcers, erosions, angiodysplasia, and submucosal lesions. The source of bleeding was found in 15 of 20 patients with iron deficiency anemia. There were no immediate significant side effects and none reported up to 1 month after ingestion of the capsule. The capsule was evacuated by all patients.CONCLUSIONS:The wireless-capsule video endoscope, in our study of feasibility, was proven to be a safe, painless, ambulatory, and effective procedure, with a high diagnostic yield. Its major importance is in diagnosing small bowel pathology where all other imaging techniques have failed.


Journal of Hepatology | 2000

Superoxide dismutase activity in children with chronic liver diseases

Efrat Broide; Elieser Klinowski; George K. Koukoulis; Nedim Hadzic; Bernard Portmann; Alastair Baker; Eitan Scapa; Giorgina Mieli-Vergani

BACKGROUND/AIMSnLiver disease in infancy has multiple etiologies. As reactive oxygen intermediates are involved in several types of tissue damage, we have investigated whether different forms of liver disease in infancy are associated with increased free radical generation, using an indirect approach in which superoxide dismutase (a free radical scavenger) activity is determined in the liver tissue.nnnMETHODSnA total of 48 liver biopsies performed at diagnosis were evaluated retrospectively. Nine infants had biliary atresia, eight Alagille syndrome, seven alantitrypsin deficiency and 12 cryptogenic hepatitis. As controls we studied 12 biopsies with normal histology obtained from seven children with portal vein thrombosis and five children who underwent biopsy for management reason but had no liver disease. Superoxide dismutase activity in liver biopsy specimens was measured using the cytochrome C method by spectrophotometry and expressed as U SOD/mg protein.nnnRESULTSnSuperoxide dismutase activity was significantly increased in biliary atresia (1.25 +/- 0.56 U SOD/mg protein, p<0.0001) and Alagille syndrome (1.31 +/- 0.56 U SOD/mg protein, p<0.0001) as compared with al-antitrypsin deficiency (0.75 +/- 0.3 U SOD/mg protein), neonatal hepatitis (0.72 +/- 0.37 U. SOD/mg protein) and normal controls (0.4 +/- 0.7 U. SOD/mg protein). The highest level of SOD activity was found, however, in control children with portal vein thrombosis (2.09 +/- 0.96 U SOD/mg protein; p<0.0001 as compared to the other groups).nnnCONCLUSIONnSuperoxide dismutase, a key enzyme in free radical protection, is increased significantly in the liver tissue of infants with cholestatic liver disease due to bile duct damage and in children with portal vein thrombosis, suggesting that products of free radical reactions are involved in the pathogenesis of these disorders.


Digestion | 2007

Antiplatelet Therapy and the Risk of Bleeding Induced by Gastrointestinal Endoscopic Procedures

Nimrod A. Kimchi; Efrat Broide; Eitan Scapa; Shlomo Birkenfeld

Antiplatelet drugs may increase the risk of bleeding induced by gastrointestinal endoscopic procedures. The antiplatelet effect of cyclooxygenase-1 inhibitors lasts less than 4 h. Skin and colonic bleeding times are prolonged for 3 and 5 days after aspirin and ticlopidine withdrawal respectively. Major bleeding from endoscopic biopsies is extremely rare. In the four recent largest series, the general incidence of polypectomy-induced major bleeding was 0.11–0.42%. In more than half of the cases the bleeding was delayed, usually up to 2 weeks after the endoscopy. Although three retrospective studies suggested that aspirin does not increase the risk of polypectomy-induced bleeding, the power of these studies is limited. Similarly, it is difficult to draw conclusions from the two studies that assessed the risk of aspirin use during sphincterotomy. Aspirin withdrawal may be harmful in susceptible patients, mainly if it is for more than 7 days. There is no indication to stop aspirin before esophagogastroduodenoscopy, which may reveal aspirin-induced lesions. We recommend discontinuation of aspirin 4–7 days (according to the cardiovascular risk) before other endoscopic procedures. When aspirin is indicated for primary prevention, it can be resumed 14 and 10 days after polypectomy and sphincterotomy respectively. In cases of secondary prevention, it should be resumed after 1 week.


Surgery Today | 2011

Blunt pancreatic trauma in children

Baruch Klin; Ibrahim Abu-Kishk; Igor Jeroukhimov; Yigal Efrati; Eran Kozer; Efrat Broide; Yuri Brachman; Laurian Copel; Eitan Scapa; Gideon Eshel; Gad Lotan

PurposeTo report our experience with blunt pancreatic trauma in pediatric patients and evaluate several various management strategies.MethodsTen children admitted over the last 10 years with pancreatic blunt trauma were included in the present series.ResultsThe average time from injury to hospital admission was 2.4 days. All injuries resulted from accidents: bicycle handlebar injuries (5), being kicked by a horse (2), falls from a height (2), and injury sustained during closure of an electric gate (1). Additional systemic and abdominal injuries were recorded in 7 patients. The amylase levels at the time of patient admission were normal in 3 patients, mildly raised in 4 patients, and elevated in 3 patients. Abdominal computed tomography was performed in 10 patients, ultrasonography in 5, and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) in 4. Pancreatic injuries comprised 4 grade I, 3 grade II, and 3 grade III injuries. Grade I and II injuries were successfully managed by conservative treatment. The 3 children with grade III trauma and pancreatic ductal injury in the neck (1), body (1), and tail (1) of the gland were surgically treated, having an uneventful postoperative stay of 8–14 days and no complications during the 1-year follow-up period.ConclusionThe present study supports early ERCP as an essential part of the initial patient evaluation when pancreatic transection is highly suspected.


Gastroenterology | 1993

Buerger's disease presenting as acute small bowel ischemia.

Efrat Broide; Eitan Scapa; Amir Peer; Ella Witz; Dov Abramowich; Jerachmiel Eshchar

The case of a young man with an unusual presentation of thromboangiitis obliterans with ischemia of the small bowel, 2 years before peripheral vascular disease of the extremities was clinically expressed, is reported.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2011

Intima-media thickness of the common carotid artery is not significantly higher in Crohn's disease patients compared to healthy population.

Efrat Broide; Andrei Schopan; Michael Zaretsky; Nimrod A. Kimchi; Michael Shapiro; Eitan Scapa

BackgroundPatients with Crohn’s disease might have accelerated atherosclerosis due to: chronic systemic inflammation, metabolic changes or prolonged steroid treatment.AimsThe aim of this study was to assess the risk of sub-clinical atherosclerosis in Crohn’s disease, by measuring the intima-media thickness and peak systolic velocity of the common carotid artery.MethodsFifty Crohn’s disease patients aged between 20 and 45xa0years were compared to 25 controls. Patients with a family history of cardiovascular diseases or a known risk for atherosclerosis were excluded. All participants underwent nutritional assessment. Carotid artery ultrasonography was performed and intima-media thickness and peak systolic velocity were measured, proximal to the common carotid bifurcation. Clinical data and laboratory parameters (hemoglobin, highly sensitive C-reactive protein, and plasma homocysteine) were determined.ResultsNo significant differences between the groups were found for intima-media thickness or peak systolic velocity. Multiple regression analysis revealed a positive correlation of intima-media thickness with older age. Peak systolic velocity was negatively associated with age.ConclusionsCrohn’s disease patients do not have an increased risk for developing early atherosclerosis.


European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 1996

Superoxide dismutase activity in duodenal ulcer patients.

Elieser Klinowski; Efrat Broide; Rina Varsano; Jerachmiel Eshchar; Eitan Scapa

Objective: To investigate whether duodenal ulcer (DU) is associated with increased free radical generation at the site of ulceration and to attempt, indirectly, to confirm the hypothesis by determining activity of free radical scavengers such as superoxide dismutase (SOD). Study design: Prospective study comparing SOD activity in biopsies taken from the ulcer edge, and antrum in DU patients before and after one month of treatment to SOD activity in biopsies from the duodenal bulb and antrum in a control population. Setting: Institute of Gastroenterology of a university hospital. Study population: Twenty-five patients with DU. The diagnosis was confirmed by endoscopy. Measurements: SOD activity in biopsy specimen, red blood cells (RBC) and serum was measured using the cytochrome c method by spectrophotometry and expressed as U SOD/mg protein. Helicobacter pylori was diagnosed by the rapid urease test (CLO test) from antral biopsies. Results: SOD activity was markedly depleted in the ulcer edge (2.78±0.9 U SOD/mg protein) as compared to the same patients after one month of treatment (4.59±2.2 U SOD/mg protein) (P=0.05) and to biopsies from the duodenal bulb in control population (6.7±2.4 U. SOD/mg protein) (P=0.05). SOD activity in the antrum of both groups was similar. There was no difference in SOD activity in RBC and serum of both groups. Conclusion: Products of free radical reactions are implicated in the pathogenesis of DU disease. SOD, which is a key enzyme in gastric mucosal protection, is depleted significantly in the ulcer edge compared with controls and increases after healing. However, it is not clear whether this abnormality in oxygen free radical metabolism reflects, rather than causes, the condition which characterizes DU. European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology 1996, 8:1151–1155


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 1989

Duodenal ulcer in the elderly.

Eitan Scapa; Moshe Horowitz; Mordechai Waron; Jerachmiel Eshchar

Of 333 duodenal ulcer (DU) patients 75 (22.5%) were aged 65-93 years (study group). Ninety-two percent (306 patients) of the entire group were diagnosed endoscopically, and all were followed prospectively. In the study group of the older patients there were fewer smokers, but more patients used steroids and other nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and had more arteriosclerotic heart disease than the younger control group. Presenting signs and symptoms were similar in both age groups, although painless upper gastrointestinal bleeding was more common in the elderly, and pain, when present, tended to be milder. Bleeding episodes were more prevalent in the older age group. Another difference between the groups was the larger incidence of concurrent gastric ulcer and DU observed endoscopically in the study population. Steroids and NSAIDs could be etiologically connected to bleeding in the older patients, as well as to their relative lack of pain. We conclude that DU in the elderly tended to present atypically and that pain was not the major symptom of activity. This places a different emphasis on diagnostic and therapeutic criteria.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 1996

Superoxide dismutase activity in Helicobacter pylori-positive antral gastritis in children.

Efrat Broide; Elieser Klinowski; Rina Varsano; Jerachmiel Eshchar; Mehrdad Herbert; Eitan Scapa

Reactive oxygen metabolites have been implicated in gastric mucosal injuries. Superoxide dismutase, a scavenger of superoxide radical, is a key enzyme in gastric mucosal protection against several damaging factors. This study was aimed at investigating the relationship of superoxide dismutase activity to Helicobacter pylori-induced antral gastritis in children. Two groups of 11 children each, one positive and the other negative for Helicobacter pylori, were studied. Biopsies from the antrum and corpus were obtained for evaluation of Helicobacter pylori by CLOtest and histology as well as for superoxide dismutase activity (cytochrome c method). Erythrocytic and serum superoxide dismutase levels were determined as well. Superoxide dismutase activity was significantly higher only in the antrum of children with Helicobacter pylori-induced antral gastritis. There was no significant difference in superoxide dismutase activity in the corpus, erythrocytes, or serum of both groups. These findings may suggest a pathogenic relationship between the presence of Helicobacter pylori and oxygen radicals in inducing antral mucosal injury.


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 1989

Cimetidine-related Cardiac Conduction Disturbances and Confusion

Natan Cohen; David Modai; Ahuva Golik; Moshe Eshkoly; Jacques Theitler; Eitan Scapa

A 70-year-old woman free of renal or hepatic dysfunction developed reversible mental confusion, sinus bradycardia, and extreme QT interval prolongation following initiation of intravenous cimetidine 1200 mg daily. The association of mental confusion with cardiac conduction impairment in a single patient in the context of cimetidine toxicity is highly unusual. We review this and other reports on potentially fatal cimetidine-related cardiac conduction disturbances to suggest that in patients at risk, in addition to reducing cimetidine dosage, electrocardiogram (ECG) follow-up is indicated to identify dangerous bradycardia and QT interval prolongation.

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Zvi Fireman

Rappaport Faculty of Medicine

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