| Literature DB >> 25133128 |
Young Sin Cho1, Tae Hoon Lee1, Soon Oh Hwang1, Sunhyo Lee1, Yunho Jung1, Il-Kwun Chung1, Sang-Heum Park1, Sun-Joo Kim1.
Abstract
Afferent loop syndrome caused by an impacted enterolith is very rare, and endoscopic removal of the enterolith may be difficult if a stricture is present or the normal anatomy has been altered. Electrohydraulic lithotripsy is commonly used for endoscopic fragmentation of biliary and pancreatic duct stones. A 64-year-old man who had undergone subtotal gastrectomy and gastrojejunostomy presented with acute, severe abdominal pain for a duration of 2 hours. Initially, he was diagnosed with acute pancreatitis because of an elevated amylase level and pain, but was finally diagnosed with acute afferent loop syndrome when an impacted enterolith was identified by computed tomography. We successfully removed the enterolith using direct electrohydraulic lithotripsy conducted using a transparent cap-fitted endoscope without complications. We found that this procedure was therapeutically beneficial.Entities:
Keywords: Afferent loop syndrome; Electrohydraulic lithotripsy; Enterolith
Year: 2014 PMID: 25133128 PMCID: PMC4130896 DOI: 10.5946/ce.2014.47.4.367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endosc ISSN: 2234-2400
Fig. 1(A) An axial abdominal computed tomography (CT) image showing a large impacted enterolith (arrow) in the dilated fluid-filled afferent loop. (B) Coronal CT reconstruction better demonstrating the afferent loop obstruction by the enterolith (arrow).
Fig. 2(A) Endoscopically, an impacted yellow enterolith is apparent in the afferent loop. (B) Contrast material could not pass the obstruction due to the completely impacted enterolith on the fluoroscopic image.
Fig. 3(A) The enterolith is pulverized via electrohydraulic lithotripsy. (B) The fragmented enterolith after endoscopic removal. (C) A very large ulcerative lesion on a blind pouch of the afferent loop.