| Literature DB >> 27110342 |
Yeoun Joo Lee1, Jae-Yeon Hwang2, Yong Hoon Cho3, Yong-Woo Kim2, Tae Un Kim2, Dong Hoon Shin4.
Abstract
Gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding in pediatric patients has several causes. Vascular malformation of the small bowel is a rare disease leading to pediatric GI bleeding. To our knowledge, few reports describe ultrasound and computed tomography findings of venous malformations involving the small bowel. We present a case of long-segmental and circumferential vascular malformation that led to GI bleeding in a pre-school aged child, focusing on the radiologic findings. Although vascular malformation including of the GI tract is rare in children, it should be considered when GI bleeding occurs in pediatric patients.Entities:
Keywords: Child, Preschool; Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage; Intestine, Small; Radiology; Vascular Malformations
Year: 2016 PMID: 27110342 PMCID: PMC4835636 DOI: 10.5812/iranjradiol.29260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Radiol ISSN: 1735-1065 Impact factor: 0.212
Figure 1.Ultrasonography of the small bowel of a three-year-old girl presenting with anemia. A, 2D gray-scale image depicting bowel wall thickening with multiple cystic locules (arrows). The bowel lumen (L) was patent; B, Pseudo-flow artifact was provoked when the lesion was compressed by a sonographic probe; C, Oblique coronal reformatted arterial phase computed tomography (CT) image showing segmental bowel wall thickening involving the middle layer of the jejunum (arrows); D, Portovenous phase CT image revealing the multifocal contrast-filling spaces at the thickened bowel wall (arrowheads); E and F, CT angiography with maximum intensity projection (MIP) images showing no engorged mesenteric vessel on arterial and portovenous phases. Note the contrast filling spaces on portovenous phase (arrowheads).
Figure 2.Intraoperative photograph and microscopic examination. A, Intraoperative photograph image showing the dark red and purple berry-like vascular malformation encircling the jejunum; B, Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), 20 × magnified image showing multiple dilated vascular structures of variable sizes and the thickness of the wall affecting the bowel submucosa, muscularis propria, and subserosa.