Mesenteric venous thrombosis in a pregnant woman at first trimester gestation: a case report.
Rodrigo Piltcher -da-SilvaVivian Laís SasakiJoão Francisco PetryGuilherme Vieceli RhodenMatheus Antonio Chiconelli ZangariMariana Piltcher-RecueroGabriela de Melo RochaPaulo Cesar AndriguettoYan Sacha AguileraJúlio Cezar Uili CoelhoPublished in: Journal of surgical case reports (2022)
Mesenteric vein thrombosis (MVT) in a pregnant patient is a rare condition that seems to be associated with the pregnancy pró-thrombotic state. This can lead to severe circumstances such as intestinal hemorrhagic ischemia, sepsis, abortion and death. Abdominal assessment is challenging due to the anatomical and physiological changes during pregnancy. MVT clinical and complementary evaluation are nonspecific, making essential an image exam. We report a case of a 33-years-old woman at 11 weeks of gestation. She sought medical evaluation due to abdominal pain and had an appendicitis diagnosis, which was treated by laparoscopic surgery. One week later, she came back complaining of nonspecific abdominal pain. So an extensive evaluation was made, and the diagnosis of MVT and intestinal ischemia was concluded. She underwent laparotomy exploration and anticoagulation, having a good evolution and so was discharged on the sixth post-operative day.