“…1 However, many authors interested in the disease prefer the term "Behçet syndrome" to "Behçet's disease", because its manifestations and severity can vary considerably between patients and even in terms of the prevalence of individual manifestations in different parts of the world, in particular those related to intestinal involvement. 2 Behçet's disease is rare, chronic, relapsing, inflammatory, and multisystemic 3,4 and can provoke mucocutaneous, ocular, vascular, cardiac, neural, and gastrointestinal manifestations. 5 The international diagnostic criteria for BD are recurrent oral ulceration (apthous ulcerations that recur three or more times in a 12-month period) and at least two of the following: recurrent genital ulceration (apthous ulcer or scabs), ocular lesions (anterior uveitis or retinal vasculitis), cutaneous lesions (erythema nodosum, pseudofolliculitis, or papulopustular lesions), and pathergy (skin hyperreactivity test in response to a minimal trauma, with readings in 24-48 hours) 6,7 Vascular involvement is one of the primary predictors of morbidity and mortality in BD, with a negative impact on prognosis.…”