| Literature DB >> 21251320 |
Viplove Senadhi1, Deepika Arora, Manish Arora, Sudhir Dutta.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Hemobilia is a rare cause of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. More than 50% of hemobilia cases are related to iatrogenic trauma from hepatobiliary procedures, and needle biopsy of the liver represents the most common cause. A minority of hemobilia cases are due to hepatobiliary disorders such as cholangitis, hepatobiliary cancers, choledocholithiasis, and vascular abnormalities in the liver. The classic presentation of hemobilia is the triad of right upper quadrant (biliary) pain, obstructive jaundice, and upper gastrointestinal bleeding. We report a rare case of hemobilia caused by a spontaneous hepatic cyst rupture, where our patient presented without the classical symptoms, in the absence of therapeutic or pathological coagulopathy, and in the absence of spontaneous or iatrogenic trauma. CASEEntities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21251320 PMCID: PMC3038954 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-5-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Causes of hemobilia stratified by pathophysiology
| Pathophysiology | Various causes of hemobilia |
|---|---|
| Iatrogenic trauma (most common cause) | Most common causes: needle biopsy of liver, percutaneous biliary drainage |
| Sphincterotomy, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), percutaneous transhepatic cholangiogram (PTC) | |
| Biliary stent trauma, cholecystectomy, choledochoscopy (spyglass) | |
| Trauma | Blunt trauma more common than penetrating trauma |
| Inflammation | Gallstone disease and cholangitis (most common in this category) |
| Acalculous cholecystitis, polyarteritis nodosa | |
| Tropical hemobilia (ductal parasitism caused by | |
| Hepatic polyp or neoplasm | Benign lesions such as benign adenomatous polyp, diffuse papillomatosis |
| Gall bladder polyp | |
| Malignant neoplasms such as hepatocellular carcinoma, cholangiocarcinoma; metastasis | |
| Spontaneous hemobilia | From pathological coagulopathy or therapeutic coagulopathy |
| Aneurysms | Ruptured hepatic artery aneurysm (most common in this category) |
| Cystic artery pseudoaneurysm | |
| Post-traumatic pseudoaneurysm of an anomalous right hepatic artery with arterio-biliary fistula (rare case report) | |
| Hepatic cystic lesions | Hepatic abscess or hepatic cyst (hemobilia complicating liver abscess and/or cyst) |
| Miscellaneous (rare) | Potentially fatal hemobilia due to inappropriate use of an expanding biliary stent, pancreatic pseudocyst |
| Arterio-choledochal fistula, erosion of hepatic artery by cholelithiasis with cholecystoduodenal fistula | |
Figure 1Axial computed tomography showing a hepatic cyst infiltrating upon the common hepatic duct and causing hepatic duct dilation.
Figure 2Axial computed tomography showing a hepatic cyst infringing on the ductal system.
Figure 3Coronal computed tomography showing hepatic cyst communication with the common bile duct.
Figure 4Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) evaluating the 18 mm common hepatic duct filling defect, and revealing obstructing blood clots.
Figure 5Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatographic (ERCP) removal of obstructing blood clots is initiated.