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A rare complication of jejunal extension of a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube for levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel administration.

Pablo Olcina DomínguezFélix González MartínezSergio Gil RojasMaría Belén López MorenoPablo Martínez BlancoJesús García-Cano Lizcano
Published in: Revista espanola de enfermedades digestivas : organo oficial de la Sociedad Espanola de Patologia Digestiva (2022)
Direct intestinal administration of levodopa-carbidopa gel has shown good results in selected patients with Parkinson's disease (1, 2). We want to present a complication related to the device necessary for the administration of this drug. A 58-year-old man, diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, treated for six months with levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel, administered through a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube with jejunal extension, presented at the emergency department for abdominal pain. The patient complained abdominal discomfort that lasted two months. It was described as pain around the umbilical area that radiated to the left lumbar region, worsened after ingestion, and did not subside with conventional analgesia.
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