Reeve T, Jackson B, Scott-Conner C, Sledge C
Department of Surgery, University of Mississippi School of Medicine, Jackson 39216-4505.
South Med J. 1988 Apr;81(4):515-7. doi: 10.1097/00007611-198804000-00027.
Gastric dilatation caused by psychogenic polyphagia or bulimia may, under extreme circumstances, progress to total gastric necrosis. We have described a patient in whom acute abdominal symptoms and signs developed while he was receiving psychiatric treatment. Laparotomy showed massive gastric dilatation with near-total infarction. Total gastrectomy with cervical esophagostomy, feeding and decompressing jejunostomies, and wide drainage of the gastric bed were done. After staged reconstruction, recovery was uneventful.