| Literature DB >> 24717991 |
Sudeep Pradeep Yadav1, Priyadarshan Anand Jategaonkar2, Aayush Goyal1, Dinesh Kamath1.
Abstract
An enterolith is an infrequent clinical entity. It is generally diagnosed on imaging or at surgery. It is usually associated with underlying benign lesions like intestinal tuberculosis or Crohn's disease. Here, we report an unusual case of an elderly lady presenting with an acute small-bowel obstruction. On admission, her abdominal X-ray revealed a radio-opacity obstructing the jejunum. Her subsequent abdominal contrast-enhanced computed tomography revealed a big enterolith entrapped in a stricturous jejunal lesion. However, there was no pneumobilia. Consequently, she underwent an exploratory laparotomy followed by an "en-block" jejunal resection for suspiciously malignant impassable jejunal stricture. The cutopen specimen revealed 5 x 4 cm enterolith embedded in a tight ulcero-proliferative stricture. Histopathology confirmed jejunal adenocarcinoma. It is always prudent to suspect an underlying small-bowel malignancy while managing a seemingly straightforward case of small-bowel obstruction. The policy of prophylactic radical oncologic clearance may avoid inadvertent R1/R2 resections.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24717991 DOI: 03.2014/JCPSP.S18S19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Coll Physicians Surg Pak ISSN: 1022-386X Impact factor: 0.711