An unexpected complication following uterine artery embolisation.
Sarah PetersMichelle R WiseBrendan BuckleyPublished in: BMJ case reports (2017)
A 35-year-old nulliparous woman underwent uterine artery embolisation (UAE) for heavy menstrual bleeding and anaemia due to fibroids, refractive to medical and surgical treatment.Bilateral UAE was performed after cephazolin prophylaxis and analgesia. Postoperatively, pain and abdominal bloating were prominent. Symptoms were initially treated as postembolisation syndrome, and analgesia was escalated. By the third day, pain was worsening and the woman developed marked tachypnoea and tachycardia, with raised inflammatory markers and lactate. An abdominal X-ray and CT showed dilated colon. A colonoscopy demonstrated severe mucosal ulceration down to the muscular layer.A subtotal colectomy and end ileostomy formation was performed with intraoperative findings of toxic megacolon with near perforation. The cause of the toxic megacolon, in the absence of previous bowel pathology, was attributed to pseudomembranous colitis as a consequence of single dose prophylactic antibiotic.
Keyphrases
- pain management
- case report
- chronic pain
- postoperative pain
- dual energy
- neuropathic pain
- healthcare
- ultrasound guided
- computed tomography
- high resolution
- ulcerative colitis
- atrial fibrillation
- patients undergoing
- early onset
- magnetic resonance imaging
- contrast enhanced
- image quality
- pregnant women
- positron emission tomography
- mass spectrometry
- newly diagnosed
- magnetic resonance
- drug induced
- catheter ablation
- body composition