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Jornal Português de Gastrenterologia

versão impressa ISSN 0872-8178

J Port Gastrenterol. v.18 n.1 Lisboa jan. 2011

 

De Viena a Montreal. Mais Distantes Geograficamente do que na Doença de Crohn

From Vienna to Montreal. Further Apart Geographically than in Crohn's Disease

 

Francisco Portela1

1 Local de trabalho: Serviço de Gastrenterologia, Hospitais da Universidade de Coimbra - Portugal;

E-mail: fasportela@gmail.com.

 

Texto completo disponível apenas em PDF.

Full text only available in PDF format.

 

REFERÊNCIAS

1. Rebelo A, Rosa B, Moreira MJ, et al. Da Classificação de Viena para a nova classificação de Montreal: caracterização fenotípica e evolução clínica da doença de Crohn. GE - J Port Gastrenterol 2011, 18:15-21.        [ Links ]

2. Farmer RG, Hawk WA, Turnbull RB Jr. Clinical patterns in Crohn’s disease: a statistical study of 615 cases. Gastroenterology 1975;68:627-635.

3. Greenstein AJ, Lachman P, Sachar DB, et al. Perforating and nonperforating indications for repeated operations in Crohn’s disease: evidence for two clinical forms. Gut 1988;29:588-592.

4. Sachar DB, Andrews HA, Farmer RG, et al. Proposed Classification of Patient Subgroups in Crohn’s Disease. Gastroenterol Int 1992;5:141-154.

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8. Brant SR, Panhuysen CI, Bailey-Wilson JE, et al. Linkage heterogeneity for the IBD1 locus in Crohn’s disease pedigrees by disease onset and severity. Gastroenterology 2000;119:1483-1490.

9. Russell RK, Drummond HE, Nimmo EE, et al. Genotype-phenotype analysis in childhood-onset Crohn’s disease: NOD2/CARD15 variants consistently predict phenotypic characteristics of severe disease. Inflamm Bowel Dis 2005;11:955-964.

10. Vasiliauskas EA, Kam LY, Karp LC, et al. Marker antibody expression stratifies Crohn’s disease into immunologically homogeneous subgroups with distinct clinical characteristics. Gut 2000;47:487-496.

11. Louis E, Collard A, Oger AF, et al. Behaviour of Crohn’s disease according to the Vienna classification: changing pattern over the course of the disease. Gut 2001;49:777-782.

12. Magro F, Portela F, Lago P, et al. Crohn’s disease in a southern European country: Montreal Classification and clinical activity. Inflamm Bowel Dis 2009;15:1343-1350.