| Literature DB >> 30323730 |
Bertha E García-Ramírez1, Carlos M Nuño-Guzmán1,2, Ricardo E Zaragoza-Carrillo1, Hugo Salado-Rentería1, Audrey Gómez-Abarca1, Jorge L Corona3.
Abstract
Bezoars are conglomerations of undigested foreign material retained in the gastrointestinal tract. Trichobezoar is a compact conglomeration of swallowed hair and constitutes less than 6% of all bezoars. Their most frequent location is in the stomach but they may extend through the pylorus into the small bowel. This condition is known as Rapunzel syndrome. Many patients may remain asymptomatic or present a mild form of the disease characterized by abdominal pain, early satiety, nausea, and vomiting. Complications may manifest as gastric outlet obstruction or bleeding, and intestinal obstruction. A 15-year-old female patient presented with clinical findings of intestinal obstruction. The patient suffered from depressive and anxiety disorders and trichotillomania, although trichophagy could not be assured. Alopecia circumscripta and irregular hair length on the scalp were identified. A computed tomography (CT) scan showed two images highly suggestive of trichobezoars, one in the stomach and the second one causing obstruction at the ileocecal valve. At laparotomy, both a mobile gastric trichobezoar with a tail extending to the duodenum and a trichobezoar causing obstruction at the ileocecal valve were removed. The postoperative course was uneventful. The passage of a detached trichobezoar fragment in a patient with Rapunzel syndrome may cause intestinal obstruction. CT is the preferred image modality for the evaluation of suspected trichobezoars in order to characterize their size and locations, the presence and level of obstruction, and complications such as ischemia or perforation. A case of small-bowel obstruction secondary to ileal trichobezoar in a patient with Rapunzel syndrome is herein reported.Entities:
Keywords: Case report; Gastric trichobezoar; Intestinal obstruction; Rapunzel syndrome; Small-bowel trichobezoar; Trichobezoar
Year: 2018 PMID: 30323730 PMCID: PMC6180255 DOI: 10.1159/000492810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Gastroenterol ISSN: 1662-0631
Fig. 1.a Plain abdominal film showing a distended and occupied stomach (arrows), dilated small bowel loops and air-fluid levels, and distension of distal ileum (arrowhead). b CT scan demonstrating a large ovoid heterogeneous mass within the gastric lumen (arrows), surrounded by gastric fluid (asterisk). The nasogastric tube is also shown (arrowhead). c CT scan also showing dilated small-bowel loops and air-fluid levels proximal to a heterogeneous intraluminal mass causing obstruction at the ileocecal valve (arrows). The cecum is shown displaced and compressed by the dilated ileum (arrowhead). Both intraluminal masses are suggestive of trichobezoars.
Fig. 2.a At gastrotomy, a 3-kg trichobezoar was removed. b The trichobezoar removed from the stomach (arrow) had a dense tail extending to the duodenum (hollow arrows). The trichobezoar removed from the ileocecal valve measured 7.5 × 4 cm (asterisk).