De Luca Luca, Ricciardiello Luigi, Modugno Pietro, De Filippo Carlo Maria, Baroncini Danilo
Gastroenterology and Digestive Endoscopy Unit, San Salvatore Hospital, Piazzale Cinelli, 1, 61100, Pesaro, Italy.
Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Clin J Gastroenterol. 2011 Apr;4(2):60-3. doi: 10.1007/s12328-010-0190-9. Epub 2011 Jan 15.
Celiomesenteric ischemia has an insidious onset and the non-specific symptoms are often misdiagnosed as cholecystitis or peptic ulcer disease with a consequential delay between the onset of symptoms and radiological evidence of vascular occlusive disease. A elderly man was hospitalized after a 2-3 week history of acute abdominal pain, frequent vomiting, and chronic diarrhea associated with bloody stools. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy showed a cobblestone gastric pattern with multiple ulcerated areas and the specimens indicated focal full thickness coagulative necrosis of the mucosa. A magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) revealed a widespread and severe atheromatous disease characterized by a hemodynamically significant stenosis of the celiac tripod, pre-occlusive stenosis of the superior mesenteric artery and complete occlusion of the inferior mesenteric artery. MRA is now the best and most accessible noninvasive examination to help establish a diagnosis, providing high-quality three-dimensional images of the celiac axis and mesenteric arteries. However, the various features observed in this case such as the clinical history, the presence of a cobblestone pattern with multiple ulcerated areas in the stomach, the coagulative-type necrosis and ischemic atrophy of the adjacent mucosa were considered diagnostic of gastric ischemia.