Topics Capsule Endoscopy
Capsule Endoscopy
Capsule endoscopy techniques, deployment during EGD, and emerging capsule-based devices.
2 articles
Capsule endoscopy is a non-invasive, ingestible-camera technology that visualizes the small bowel — territory beyond the reach of conventional endoscopes. The standard application is investigation of obscure GI bleeding, but capsule endoscopy also evaluates suspected Crohn's disease, small-bowel tumors, and surveillance in polyposis syndromes. Newer indications include capsule colonoscopy in selected patients who cannot tolerate conventional colonoscopy, and a recent generation of capsules dedicated to upper GI bleeding detection.
Deployment is straightforward in most patients — the capsule is swallowed, transit takes roughly 8 hours, and images are reviewed with computer-assisted reading software. Patency is the main technical concern: known or suspected strictures should be evaluated with a patency capsule (which dissolves in 30 hours if retained) before deploying a non-dissolving imaging capsule, since retention can require enteroscopy or surgery.
Endoscopic capsule deployment during EGD is useful for patients unable to swallow the capsule or with delayed gastric emptying — the capsule is delivered into the duodenum using a dedicated delivery device or net, accelerating small-bowel transit and improving completion rates. The PillSense capsule is a newer point-of-care device that detects active upper GI bleeding within minutes, useful in triage of emergency department patients.
Articles
How to Deploy a Capsule Endoscope During EGD An elderly lady with obscure occult gastrointestinal bleeding could not swallow the capsule endoscope (CE) (PillCam) (Figure 1A). Therefore, an EGD was scheduled to introduce the capsule endoscope into the duodenum.
Technical Review: PillSense ®, a Novel Swallowable Capsule to Detect Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding