| Literature DB >> 27785267 |
Rohan Mandaliya1, Benjamin Krevsky2, Abhinav Sankineni2, Kiley Walp2, Oliver Chen3.
Abstract
Hemosuccus pancreaticus (bleeding from the pancreatic duct into the gastrointestinal tract via the ampulla of Vater) is a rare, potentially life-threatening and obscure cause of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. It is caused by rupture of the psuedoaneurysm of a peripancreatic vessel into pancreatic duct or pancreatic psuedocyst in the context of pancreatitis or pancreatic tumors. It can pose a significant diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma due to its anatomical location and that bleeding into the duodenum is intermittent and cannot be easily diagnosed by endoscopy. A 61-year-old female with HIV and alcoholism presented with 3 weeks of intermittent abdominal pain and melena. Examination revealed hypotension with pallor and mild epigastric tenderness. She was found to have severe anemia and a high serum lipase. It was decided to perform a contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan that demonstrated a hemorrhagic pancreatic pseudocyst with possible active bleeding into the cyst. An emergent angiogram showed a large pseudoaneurysm of the pancreaticoduodenal artery that was successfully embolized. Subsequent endoscopy showed blood near ampulla of Vater confirming the diagnosis of hemosuccus pancreaticus. Thus the bleeding pseudocyst was communicating with pancreatic duct. The patient had no further episodes of gastrointestinal bleeding. Hemosuccus pancreaticus should be considered in patients with intermittent crescendo-decrescendo abdominal pain, gastrointestinal bleeding and a high serum lipase. Contrast-enhanced CT scan can be an excellent initial diagnostic modality and can lead to prompt angiography for embolization of the bleeding pseudoaneurysm and can eliminate the need for surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Angiography; Endoscopy; Hemosuccus pancreaticus; Pancreatitis; Pseudoaneurysm; Upper gastrointestinal bleeding
Year: 2014 PMID: 27785267 PMCID: PMC5051140 DOI: 10.14740/gr596w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterology Res ISSN: 1918-2805
Figure 1Contrast-enhanced CT scan of the abdomen reveals a 5 × 6 × 7 cm complex cystic mass in the region of uncinate process of pancreatic head with an enhancing capsule and a small hyperdensity consistent with pseudoaneurysm of a peripancreatic vessel with active bleeding into the pancreatic pseudocyst.
Figure 2Contrast-enhanced CT scan of the abdomen reveals dilated pancreatic duct possibly filled with blood.
Figure 3Abdominal angiography demonstrates an actively bleeding large pseudoaneurysm in the peripancreatic vessel arcade likely in the branch of pancreaticoduodenal artery.
Figure 4Post embolization angiogram shows embolization of the pancreaticoduodenal artery with resolution of contrast opacification of the bleeding pseudoaneurysm.
Figure 5Esophagogastroduodenoscopy shows with no bleeding source in the stomach.
Figure 6Esophagogastroduodenoscopy shows old blood in the duodenum near the ampulla of Vater, which is likely the source of bleeding into gastrointestinal tract. Arrow pointing towards the ampulla of Vater.
Comparison of the Three Rare Causes of Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding
| Hemosuccus pancreaticus | Hemobilia | Primary aortoenteric fistula | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | Bleeding from the pancreatic duct into duodenum via the ampulla of Vater. | Bleeding from the biliary tract into duodenum via ampulla of Vater. | Bleeding from the aorta into the duodenum (most common) via fistula between aorta and duodenum. |
| Source | Pancreas, pancreatic pseudocyst. | Intrahepatic, extrahepatic like gall bladder or bile duct. | Aorta. |
| Bleeding vessel | Peripancreatic vessels like splenic, gastroduodenal, pancreaticoduodenal, splenic and sometimes hepatic artery. | Hepatic artery, branch of right or left hepatic artery. | Aorta. |
| Site of bleeding into the gastrointestinal tract | Second part of duodenum (ampulla of Vater). | Second part of duodenum (ampulla of Vater). | Third part of duodenum (most common). |
| Classic triad | Abdominal pain, gastrointestinal hemorrhage and hyperamylasemia. | Abdominal pain, gastrointestinal hemorrhage and jaundice. | Abdominal pain, gastrointestinal hemorrhage and pulsatile abdominal mass. |
| Characteristic picture | Crescendo-decrescendo abdominal pain followed by hemorrhage with a repeat cycle of pain followed by hemorrhage. | Abdominal pain and hemorrhage usually with a recent history of instrumentation. | “Herald” hemorrhage followed hours, days, or weeks later by catastrophic hemorrhage. |
| Causes | Chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic pseudocyst, pancreatic tumors, iatrogenic like EUS/ERCP, vascular malformations, and so on. | Iatrogenic (liver biopsy, percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography, instrumentation, and so on), trauma, hepatobiliary malignancy, inflammation (cholangitis, vasculitis, gallstone disease), parasitic infection, vascular malformation, and so on. | Aortic aneurysm (majority atherosclerotic, followed by mycotic aneurysms), septic aortitis, radiation, carcinoma, ulcers, and so on. |
| Diagnostic test | Contrast CT scan very helpful, EGD (diagnostic in 30%), angiography. | Contrast CT scan very helpful, EGD (diagnostic in 12%), ERCP in some cases, technitium red cell scan in some cases, angiography. | Contrast CT scan the most diagnostic. EGD in initial phase when bleeding is herald. Angiography usually not performed as most patients are critically ill when considered for angiography. |
| Treatment | Transcatheter arterial embolization of the pancreatic vessel, Surgery is TAE fails; includes ligation of bleeding vessel, excision of aneurysm, central/distal pancreatectomy. | Transcatheter arterial embolization of hepatic artery (first approach). Surgery if TAE fails; includes ligation of bleeding vessel, excision of aneurysm. Further options depend on site of bleeding; partial hepatectomy, cholecystectomy. | Emergent laparotomy. Debridement of diseased aorta and repair with prosthetic graft along with primary repair of the gastrointestinal tract. |