| Literature DB >> 28943577 |
Kei Endo1, Keisuke Kakisaka1, Yuji Suzuki1, Takayuki Matsumoto2, Yasuhiro Takikawa1.
Abstract
An 82-year-old Japanese man visited our hospital with abdominal fullness accompanied by lower abdominal pain. He presented with small bowel obstruction due to multiple diospyrobezoars. The bezoars were successfully removed without any surgical intervention by the administration of Coca-Cola Zero through a long intestinal tube and subsequent endoscopic manipulation. Such a combination may be the treatment of choice for small bowel obstruction due to bezoars.Entities:
Keywords: Coca-Cola Zero; endoscopic manipulation; long intestinal tube; multiple diospyrobezoars; small bowel obstruction
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28943577 PMCID: PMC5725854 DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.8922-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Med ISSN: 0918-2918 Impact factor: 1.271
Figure 1.(A) Plain and (B) Enhanced (transverse section) computed tomography (CT) images reveal distension of the small intestine and multiple bubbly mass impaction within the stomach (arrow) and ileum (arrowheads).
Figure 2.Small bowel radiography through a long intestinal tube detected multiple filling defects (arrows) in the ileum. A bezoar of the most distal side was considered to have caused the obstruction (arrowhead) because the water-soluble contrast material did not flow beyond it.
Figure 3.(A) Computed tomography (CT) reveal that the bezoars had moved to the terminal ileum. (B) Colonoscopy revealing that the ileocecal valve had become edematous. (C) Green-to-brownish bezoars were impacted within the terminal ileum. (D) The bezoars were extracted to the cecum.
Figure 4.(A) Esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealing two green-to-brown bezoars at the fornix to the upper gastric body, (B) A gastric ulcer at the antrum, (C) After ingesting Coca-Cola Zero, (D) the bezoars disintegrated into small pieces.