| Literature DB >> 22066103 |
Gun Min Kim1, Eun Jung Jun, Yong Cheol Kim, Jin Min Park, Seok In Hong, Dae Young Cheung, Jin Il Kim, Youn Soo Lee.
Abstract
Gastrointestinal melanosis is observed most frequently in the colon it also can develop in the ileum, duodenum and esophagus very rarely. Melanosis ilei was thought that causative materials such as aluminum, magnesium, silicate, titanium and other compounds entered the body through the ingestion of agents. We experienced a case of melanosis in the terminal ileum that a 65-year-old female patient ingested 10 g edible charcoal everyday for 3 years to address symptoms of chronic abdominal pain. In Korea, edible charcoal has been considered to be an effective folk remedy for patients with diarrhea or chronic abdominal pain. In our case, a follow up colonoscopy was performed 3.5 years after the termination of the ingestion of edible charcoal, at which point pigmentation was faded color intensity. In conclusion, it is thought that melanosis ilei is a rare disease by ingestion of causative materials and is discontinuous, local and reversible disease.Entities:
Keywords: Capsule endoscopy; Charcoal; Electron microscopy; Ileum; Melanosis
Year: 2011 PMID: 22066103 PMCID: PMC3204554 DOI: 10.4174/jkss.2011.81.1.66
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Korean Surg Soc ISSN: 1226-0053
Fig. 1Colonoscopic features of terminal ileum and capsule endoscopy finding of ileum. (A) The mucosa of the terminal ileum shows punctuate and confluent areas of pigmentation. The lesion is observed as multiple and variable sized geographic black pigmentation spots in the mucosa, and the borders of the lesion are well demarcated. (B) This image shows the well demarcated black pigmented mucosa at terminal ileum.
Fig. 2Histologic features and electron microscopic finding of melanosis ilei. (A) Light microscope shows macrophages containing black coarse pigments (arrow) in the lamina propria and submucosa (H&E, ×200). (B) This image shows pigment granules at the microvilli and cytoplasms of epithelial cells (arrow) (×4,000).
Fig. 3Follow-up colonoscopy 3.5 years later. The pigment deposition was still observable but had diminished in color intensity.