| Literature DB >> 35632985 |
Wenbing Zhang1, Haifeng Chen2, Lulu Zhu3, Zhiyuan Kong1, Tingting Wang4, Weiping Li1.
Abstract
Intussusception mostly occurs in childhood and is rare in adults. Although intussusception can occur in any part of the gastrointestinal tract, gastroduodenal intussusception caused by a gastric tumor is relatively uncommon in clinical practice. A PubMed search identified 24 published cases of gastroduodenal intussusception caused by gastric gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST); however, it is possible that we missed other cases not included in PubMed. Here we report a case of gastroduodenal intussusception caused by gastric GIST in an 85-year-old man. He came to the hospital because of recurrent black stools. Plain computed tomography (CT) scan indicated a mass in the gastric antrum, with slight enhancement in the arterial phase on enhanced CT scan. He was diagnosed with GIST. In addition, images indicated that the mass overlapped into the duodenum, and gastroduodenal intussusception was thus considered. Gastroscopy showed a huge mass in the gastric body. According to the gastroscopy and CT results, gastroduodenal intussusception caused by a gastric tumor was considered. The patient underwent complete surgical removal, which revealed a mass originating from the gastric antrum and overlapping into the duodenum. The postoperative pathological diagnosis was intermediate-risk gastric GIST. The patient was followed up for 4 months without tumor recurrence.Entities:
Keywords: Gastroduodenal intussusception; adult; duodenum; gastric tumor; gastrointestinal stromal tumor; surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35632985 PMCID: PMC9150259 DOI: 10.1177/03000605221100772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Med Res ISSN: 0300-0605 Impact factor: 1.573
Figure 1.Gastroscopic examination revealed uplifted mucosa (arrows) of the gastric body and overlap into the duodenum (a) and Endoscopic reduction was performed (arrows) (b).
Figure 2.Enhanced computed tomography scan showed a mass (arrows) with slight enhancement in the arterial (a) and venous (b) phases on 27 July 2021.
Figure 3.A mass measuring 6 cm × 5 cm (arrows) overlapped into the duodenum and was found to originate from the gastric antrum.
Figure 4.Pathological examination. (a) Hematoxylin–eosin staining showed that the cells were epithelioid (×100). Representative immunohistochemistry for (b) CKP, (c) CD117, (d) CD34, (e) DOG-1, and (f) SDHB (×100).
Twenty-five reported cases (including this case) of gastroduodenal intussusception caused by gastric gastrointestinal tumor.
| Case no. | Ref. | Year | Age/sex | Symptoms | Location | Tumor size (cm) | Diagnostic method | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Crowther et al.
| 2002 | 59/F | Indigestion, epigastric pain, vomiting | Anterior wall of antrum | 6.0 | Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and CT | Surgical resection |
| 2 | Adjepong et al.
| 2006 | 84/M | Abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting | Gastric antrum | 4.0 | Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and CT | Laparoscopic Billroth II distal gastrectomy |
| 3 | Samamé et al.
| 2007 | 69/– | Epigastralgia, hematemesis and vomiting | Gastric antrum | – | CT | Exploratory laparotomy |
| 4 | Hsieh et al.
| 2021 | 84/F | Postprandial fullness, nausea and vomiting | Gastric | 5.6 | CT | Endoscopic resection |
| 5 | Yamauchi et al.
| 2017 | 95/F | Vomiting and melena | Lower gastric body | 4.0 | CT and endoscopy | Endoscopic submucosal dissection |
| 6 | Shum et al.
| 2007 | 34/F | Epigastric pain | Gastric fundus | 5.0 | CT and upper endoscopy | Partial gastrectomy |
| 7 | Siam et al.
| 2008 | 29/M | Abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and anemia | Gastric antrum | 6.0 | Capsule endoscopy and enteroscopy | Billroth I partial gastrectomy |
| 8 | Chan et al.
| 2009 | 34/F | Gastrointestinal bleeding and epigastric pain | Posterior wall of gastric fundus | 6.5 | Upper endoscopy and CT | Laparoscopic wedge resection |
| 9 | Gyedu et al.
| 2011 | 59/F | Vomiting | Anterior wall of the stomach | 7.0 | Abdominal ultrasound | Wedge resection |
| 10 | Seok et al.
| 2012 | 51/M | Nausea, vomiting, melena and severe anemia | Gastric | 5.5 | Upper endoscopy and CT | Surgical resection |
| 11 | Wilson et al.
| 2012 | 78/F | Upper abdominal discomfort, vomiting and anorexia | Distal body and antrum of the stomach | 4.5 | Gastroscopy and CT | Laparoscopic wedge resection of the stomach |
| 12 | Basir et al.
| 2012 | 62/F | Epigastric pain, anorexia, and black stools | Posterior wall of the distal body of the stomach | 5.2 | Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and CT | Billroth II partial gastrectomy |
| 13 | Rittenhouse et al.
| 2013 | 52/F | Epigastric abdominal pain, and vomiting | Fundus of the stomach | 5.0 | CT | Laparoscopic exploration and resection of the tumor |
| 14 | Babannavar et al.
| 2015 | 74/M | Vomiting | Posterior wall of the stomach | – | CT and upper gastrointestinal endoscopy | Laparotomy and resection of the tumor |
| 15 | Indiran et al.
| 2015 | –/M | Intermittent pain and vomiting | Gastric | – | Ultrasound, CT, barium meal and endoscopy | – |
| 16 | Yildiz et al.
| 2016 | 85/F | Epigastric discomfort, nausea, and weight loss | Upper gastric body | 6.0 | CT | Subtotal gastrectomy and Roux en Y anastomosis |
| 17 | Komatsubara et al.
| 2016 | 90/F | Appetite loss and vomiting | Gastric fundus | 5.0 | Esophagogastroduodenoscopy and CT | Wedge resection |
| 18 | Jameel et al.
| 2017 | 65/F | Upper abdominal pain and vomiting | Posterior wall of stomach | 6.0 | Endoscopy and CT | Laparoscopic resection |
| 19 | Zhou et al.
| 2018 | 69/M | Abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting | The posterior wall of the gastric antrum | 4.5 | Endoscopy, upper gastroenterography, and CT | Laparoscopic exploration and wedge resection |
| 20 | Ssentongo et al.
| 2018 | 85/F | Epigastric pain, dyspepsia, dizziness, and palpitations | Gastric fundus | 2.5 | CT | Laparotomy and wedge resection |
| 21 | De et al.
| 2018 | 42/F | Upper abdominal pain and vomiting | Anterior wall | 8.0 | Endoscopy and CT | Laparotomy and surgical resection |
| 22 | Đokić et al.
| 2019 | 62/M | Epigastric pain and black stools | Lesser curvature of the gastric body | 7.5 | CT | Explorative laparotomy and circular radical resection |
| 23 | Michael et al.
| 2021 | 23/F | Epigastric pain, intermittent vomiting, and loss of appetite | Gastric antrum | 7 | Esophagogastroduodenoscopy and abdominal CT | Wedge resection |
| 24 | Numpraphrut et al.
| 2021 | 55/M | Epigastric pain and vomiting | Gastric fundus | 5.5 | CT and esophagogastroduodenoscopy | Laparo-endoscopic intragastric wedge resection |
| 25 | Current case | 2021 | 85/M | Black stools and epigastric pain | Gastric antrum | 5.5 | CT and endoscopy | Laparoscopic exploration and local resection of the tumor. |
M, male; F, female; CT, computed tomography scan.