Cases reported "hemobilia"

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1/207. Posttraumatic intra-gallbladder hemorrhage in a patient with liver cirrhosis.

    We report a case of intra-gallbladder hemorrhage secondary to blunt abdominal trauma in a patient with liver cirrhosis. A 58-year-old man was admitted to a local hospital with persistent right upper quadrant abdominal pain. anemia was detected, and computed tomography (CT) revealed a high-density mass in the gallbladder lumen. He was transferred to our hospital because a gallbladder tumor was suspected. He had a history of habitual alcohol abuse and had sustained blunt abdominal trauma in the right upper quadrant 29 days before admission to our hospital (4 days before to the admission local hospital). The intra-gallbladder high-density mass depicted on the CT scan, observed as non-shadowing low-level echoes, was deemed to represent a blood clot on ultrasonography (US) performed 31 days after the trauma. US-guided percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder aspiration and cholecystography confirmed the presence of an old blood clot in the lumen. Because of the patient's persistent pain, a cholecystectomy was performed. The distended gallbladder was filled with old clotted blood. ( info)

2/207. Carcinoma gall bladder presenting as hemobilia.

    A 60-year-old man presented with recurrent bouts of melena, requiring multiple transfusions. Upper GI endoscopic evaluation demonstrated fresh bleeding from the ampulla of vater. ultrasonography and CT scan suggested a gall bladder mass without evidence of metastases. laparotomy confirmed a mass confined to the lumen of the gall bladder. The patient underwent cholecystectomy. Histological examination showed papillary adenocarcinoma of the gall bladder extending up to the muscularis propria. ( info)

3/207. Successful treatment of a pseudoaneurysm of the cystic artery with microcoil embolization.

    Pseudoaneurysms of visceral arteries are uncommon but well-characterized vascular abnormalities, usually provoked by intraabdominal inflammatory processes such as pancreatitis or cholecystitis, or by surgical trauma. However, pseudoaneurysms of the cystic artery are rare. They complicate cholecystitis or cholecystectomy, and manifest as hemobilia as they rupture into the biliary tree. The advent of transcatheter embolization techniques has begun to allow minimally invasive treatment of these life-threatening complications. Transcatheter embolization can be performed using several types of material, such as synthetic occlusive emulsions, gelatin sponges or other particles, or metallic microcoils. Microcoils are small metallic helical particles, made of stainless-steel, platinum, or tungsten. Super-selective catheterization of an artery and release of microcoils causes the vessel to thrombose and allows control of bleeding. ( info)

4/207. Acute cholecystitis secondary to hemobilia.

    Invasive diagnostic and therapeutic techniques such as percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunting, and laparoscopic cholecystectomy have led to a rise in hemobilia. Most complications from hemobilia are attributable to acute blood loss; other complications are secondary to thrombus formation in the biliary tree. We present a case report of acute cholecystitis secondary to hemobilia after percutaneous liver biopsy. The role of ERCP in the diagnosis and treatment of this exceedingly rare event is discussed. ( info)

5/207. hemobilia, a rare cause of acute pancreatitis after percutaneous liver biopsy: diagnosis and treatment by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography.

    We here report the case history of a 75-yr-old woman who developed pancreatitis and recurrent symptomatic, cholestasis-induced hemobilia after percutaneous liver biopsy. An endoscopic sphincterotomy with clot extraction led to relief of symptoms. The risk of hemobilia after percutaneous liver biopsy is less than one per 1000 procedures, and only two cases of acute pancreatitis after percutaneous liver biopsy have previously been reported. To our knowledge, this is the first case in which endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography was used to both diagnostic and therapeutic ends. ( info)

6/207. Gastric duplication communicating with the left hepatic duct: a rare case of recurrent hemobilia in a child.

    Gastric duplication is a rare anomaly, usually manifested as an abdominal mass or gastric outlet obstruction mimicking congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis during the first year of life. Occasionally, it communicates with the pancreatic duct and causes pancreatitis. However, communication with the intrahepatic bile duct has not been described. The authors report a rare case of gastric duplication that communicated with the left hepatic duct and caused recurrent hemobilia in a 2-year-old girl. Left hepatectomy and excision of the duplication were curative. ( info)

7/207. Iatrogenic hemobilia: management with transarterial embolization using gelfoam particles.

    Four patients with life threatening bleeding hemobilia from the hepatic artery were successfully treated with transarterial embolization with small gelfoam particles with no recurrence of bleeding on follow-up study. The iatragenic hemobilia occurred inadvertently during surgery in two patients, with liver biopsy in one patient and percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage procedure in another patient. Transarterial embolization appears safe and may be regarded as a life-saving treatment for bleeding hemobilia. ( info)

8/207. Sequential sonographic changes of the gallbladder in hemobilia: case report of a patient with intrahepatic duct stones.

    The sonographic features of hemobilia in the gallbladder have been reported with variation, including an echogenic mass, hypoechoic mass, and scattered intraluminal echoes. The sequential sonographic changes of hemobilia in the gallbladder were observed in a 59-year-old male patient with bilateral intrahepatic duct stones. The sonograms of hemobilia in the distended gallbladder initially showed a hyperechoic, homogeneous, movable mass-like lesion, 36 hours before the onset of upper gastrointestinal (UGI) bleeding. A hypoechoic mass-like lesion with a hyperechoic ring was found 5 days after the onset of UGI bleeding. A faint hypoechoic mass-like lesion was found 7 days after the onset of UGI bleeding (the day of no further bleeding). Scattered echoic densities were found 9 days after the onset of UGI bleeding, then disappearance of the lesion was noted 12 days after the onset of UGI bleeding. The sonographic patterns of hemobilia in the gallbladder vary depending on the timing of lysis of the blood clot. It should be differentiated from gallbladder cancer, a stone, a polyp, sludge, acute gangrenous cholecystitis, and gallbladder empyema. ( info)

9/207. A patient with undifferentiated carcinoma of gallbladder presenting with hemobilia.

    hemobilia is relatively rare among hemorrhages in the digestive tract, and hemobilia caused by tumors of the biliary tract is particularly rare. We treated a 74-year-old-man with undifferentiated carcinoma of the gallbladder presenting with hemobilia. During hospitalization for neurogenic bladder at the Department of urology, he showed progressive anemia. Since hemorrhage in the digestive tract was suspected, endoscopy of the upper gastrointestinal tract was performed, and bleeding from the papilla of Vater was observed. On ultrasound examination, findings were indicative of cholecystic cancer, and hemorrhage from the cystic duct was found on percutaneous transhepatic cholangioscopy. On perioral cholecystoscopy, however, masses of coagulated blood were found only in the gallbladder. Abnormalities such as dense staining of tumors or extravasation were not found on angiography. The patient died of hepatic failure due to rapid invasion of the liver by the tumor, associated with biliary infection and disseminated intravascular coagulation. At autopsy, a nodal tumor was found in the gallbladder, and the cavity of the gallbladder was filled with coagulated masses of blood. Direct invasion of the tumor to the liver, diaphragm, and transverse colon was found. The histopathological diagnosis was undifferentiated carcinoma (pleomorphic large-cell type). ( info)

10/207. cholecystitis caused by hemocholecyst from underlying malignancy.

    Massive hemobilia is a well recognized clinical entity, particularly when it presents with jaundice, GI bleeding, and biliary pain. However, occult hemobilia is more difficult to diagnose and has seldom been reported because of its clinically silent nature. In fact, this is usually overlooked until complications arise. Hemocholecyst or clot within the gallbladder may rarely occur in this setting, leading to cystic duct obstruction and cholecystitis. Most previous reports describe cholecystitis resulting from hemocholecyst after iatrogenic trauma. We describe two cases in which hemocholecyst occurred from underlying malignancies, both resulting in cholecystitis (acute or chronic). ( info)
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