GI Endoscopy · 1 min read

Endoscopic Differentiation in Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

Explore the key distinctions in presentation and treatment approaches for Crohn's disease vs. ulcerative colitis, two chronic inflammatory bowel diseases with varying symptoms and management strategies.

Clinical Bottom Line

Endoscopic FeatureUlcerative Colitis (UC)Crohn's Disease (CD)
Mucosal DistributionContinuous, circumferential inflammation starting perfectly at the anal verge and marching proximally."Skip lesions"—areas of severe, deep ulceration interspersed directly next to perfectly healthy, normal appearing mucosa.
Ulcer MorphologySuperficial, granular, weeping micro-ulcerations.Deep, linear, "bear-claw", or aphthous ulcerations creating a cobblestone appearance.
Rectal InvolvementUniversally involved (99% of cases).Frequently spared; the rectum is completely normal.

The Macroscopic Distinction

While histology ultimately confirms Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), the endoscopist's macroscopic documentation of the disease topography is the primary mechanism for differentiating between Ulcerative Colitis and Crohn's disease. The therapeutic algorithms—specifically the decision to utilize focal surgical resection versus systemic advanced biologics—hinge almost entirely on whether the disease is continuous or scattered.

The Rules of Anatomical Sparing

Ulcerative Colitis is biologically restricted to the colon, and it must, by definition, involve the rectum. It advances upstream in a perfectly continuous sheet of inflammation. Finding severe pancolitis but discovering perfect, pristine, normal mucosa in the rectum immediately invalidates a UC diagnosis (unless the patient has heavily utilized topical steroid enemas). Crohn's disease respects no anatomical boundaries; it can induce massive transmural "skip" ulcerations from the lips to the anus, with the terminal ileum serving as its most quintessential target zone, an area completely immune to classic UC.


Clinical guidelines summarized by the Gastroscholar Research Team. Last updated: 2026. This article is intended for physicians.

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