Usefulness of argon plasma coagulation for bleeding around hepaticojejunal anastomosis.
Yoshitaka TangeNaoyuki HasegawaYutaro SugiyamaMasato EndoMasahiko TerasakiYoshiyuki YamamotoKazunori IshigeKuniaki FukudaHideo SuzukiYuji MizokamiPublished in: DEN open (2021)
Ectopic varices due to extrahepatic portal vein obstruction (EHO) after hepaticojejunostomy have been previously reported. However, few case reports have described angiodysplasia-like lesions due to EHO around the hepaticojejunal anastomosis because they comprise small vessels in the mucosal surface and cannot be detected by contrast-enhanced computed tomography. Physicians need to insert the endoscope into the long afferent limb to diagnose angiodysplasia-like lesions around the hepaticojejunal anastomosis. Some reports have described that endoscopy stops bleeding from angiodysplasia-like lesions around the hepaticojejunal anastomosis; however, a standard methodology remains to be established. We present three cases of bleeding from an angiodysplasia-like lesion around the hepaticojejunal anastomosis that were successfully treated using argon plasma coagulation (APC) with balloon-assisted enteroscopy. Although one patient died owing to cancer progression 3 months after APC hemostasis, the hemostatic effect persisted for >2 years in the remaining two patients. These results suggest that APC is a good treatment option to stop bleeding from angiodysplasia-like lesions at hepaticojejunal anastomosis.
Keyphrases
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- contrast enhanced
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- magnetic resonance imaging
- case report
- magnetic resonance
- primary care
- end stage renal disease
- diffusion weighted
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- positron emission tomography
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small bowel
- young adults
- dual energy
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- patient reported