| Literature DB >> 26855931 |
Jooyoung Lee1, Sung Wook Hwang2, Jihye Kim1, Jinwoo Kang1, Gyeong Hoon Kang3, Kyu Joo Park4, Jong Pil Im1, Joo Sung Kim1.
Abstract
Angiodysplasia (AD) is increasingly being recognized as a major cause of gastrointestinal bleeding. Morphologically flat lesions are common types of AD, whereas the polypoid types are rare. We report a case of multiple polypoid AD in the small bowel causing severe anemia and requiring surgical treatment. A 60-year-old male patient visited our hospital with dyspnea and hematochezia. He had a history of myocardial infarction and was taking both aspirin and clopidogrel. Capsule endoscopy, enteroscopy, computed tomography, and angiography revealed multifocal vascular lesions with a polypoid shape in the jejunum. Surgical resection was performed because endoscopic treatment was considered impossible with the number and the location of lesions. The risk of recurrent bleeding related to the use of antiplatelet agents also contributed to the decision to perform surgery. AD was histologically diagnosed from the surgical specimen. He resumed taking both aspirin and clopidogrel after surgery. He fully recovered and has been doing well during the several months of follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: Angiodysplasia; Capsule endoscopy; Gastrointestinal hemorrhage
Year: 2016 PMID: 26855931 PMCID: PMC4743715 DOI: 10.5946/ce.2016.49.1.91
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endosc ISSN: 2234-2400
Fig. 1.(A-D) Capsule endoscopy image showing active bleeding from the proximal jejunum, the exact mucosal lesions could not be detected (arrows).
Fig. 2.(A-D) Computed tomography angiography scan showing multifocal small enhancing nodular lesions in the jejunum (arrows).
Fig. 3.Single-balloon enterocopy image show multiple, variabl-sized, bluish vascular lesions with a polypoid shape between the proximal (A) and distal (B) jejunum.
Fig. 4.Small-bowel resection was performed, and the length of the resected bowel was 120 cm. The resected specimen includes 16 polypoid submucosal hematomas, with the largest being 1.5×1.3×0.8 cm in size.
Fig. 5.(A) The lesion consisting of ectatic vasculature and organizing thrombi (H&E stain, ×200). (B) Elastin staining confirming that the dilated and tortuous vasculature is composed of arteries and veins with direct communication (elastin stain, ×200).