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Blue rubber bleb nevus syndrome: combined surgical and endoscopic treatment

Authors :
E. Morandi
Monica Arena
Matteo Virdis
Enzo Masci
Andrea Pisani
P. Viaggi
Enrico Opocher
Source :
Endoscopy. 47:E372-E373
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2015.

Abstract

Bluerubberblebnevussyndrome(BRBNS) is a rare disease associated with multiple venous malformations in the skin, gastrointestinal tract, and other organs [1], which usually presents with extensive hemorrhage or anemia [2]. Different therapeutic strategies havebeen proposed. We describe a case of BRBNS involving the small bowel, which was treated using a combined surgical and endoscopic approach. A 34-year-old woman with a diagnosis of BRBNS and a history of severe iron deficiency anemia was admitted for a small-bowel capsule endoscopy, which showed multiple vascular nodular lesions with signs of recent bleeding in the jejunum and proximal ileum (● " Fig.1). The patient was treated with blood transfusions and iron supplementation. A double-balloon enteroscopy was performed 2 months later because of new episodes of severe anemia (● " Fig.2), and visible proximal and distal vascular malformations were marked with ink (● " Fig.3). Computed tomography enterography revealed multiple vascular malformations also in the distal tract of the small bowel. Finally, we used a rendezvous approach with surgery and intraoperative enteroscopy. During the laparotomy, the parts of the ileal tracts with the majority of vascular lesions were identified. Two enterotomies were then performed, through which an endoscope was introduced to allow elastic band ligation to be carried out, whether upstream or downstream, of the remaining vascular lesions (● " Fig.4a,b). Surgical segmental resection of the two previously identified ileal tracts was performed (● " Fig.5). The postoperative course was normal. A follow-up small-bowel capsule endoscopy showed only three jejunal and two ileal vascular lesions, which were not bleeding. The patient remains in good clinical condition and has had no need for further blood transfusions. The treatment of BRBNS is mainly conservative. Antiangiogenic agents [3], endoscopic therapy (laser photocoagulation, sclerosis, band ligation, and polypectomy) [4], and surgery [5] have been utilized to reduce bleeding episodes. Laparotomy with intraoperative endoscopy could be used as an alternative approach in selected patients with refractory anemia and multiple lesions in the gastrointestinal tract.

Details

ISSN :
14388812 and 0013726X
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Endoscopy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....32a534cb65643b3d99d2cc48bfc36f02
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0034-1392635