| Literature DB >> 24228740 |
Keith Chiu1, Abdul Razack, Anthony Maraveyas.
Abstract
Haemorrhage is the primary complication of anticoagulation therapy with the gastrointestinal, urinary and nasal tracts the most common sites of bleeding. Haematoma within solid organs is uncommon especially in the absence of blunt trauma. We describe two patients on long term Warfarin therapy who developed focal haematomas within the pancreas. To the best of our knowledge these are the first isolated unprovoked focal pancreatic hematoma cases reported in the literature. The non-specific clinical symptoms and confusing radiological features mimicked pancreatic malignancy and this led to misdiagnosis in the one patient who underwent unnecessary surgical exploration. The haematoma was correctly identified in the second patient who was managed conservatively and had an uneventful recovery.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24228740 PMCID: PMC3849517 DOI: 10.1186/1477-9560-11-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb J ISSN: 1477-9560
Figure 1CT images of the first patient. (A) An 3 cm lesion was seen on initial post contrast venous phase CT (white arrow). This was mis-interpreted as a pancreatic malignancy. (B) Patient underwent a laparotomy which failed to identify a mass in the pancreas. Post operatively, he developed a wound site abscess (black arrow).
Figure 2CT and MRI images of the second patient. (A) A large heterogenous mass (white arrow) was identified at the head of pancreas. This was identified as a haematoma. (B) Follow-up MRI showed the pancreatic mass (black arrow) had decreased in size and demonstrated characteristic signals for a haematoma.