
Two cases of arteriovenous malformation of the intestine treated by laparoscopic surgery
Author(s) -
VaraThorbeck C.,
Toscano R.,
Requena V.,
Salvi M.,
MartinPalanca A.,
Muñoz V.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
european journal of surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1741-9271
pISSN - 1102-4151
DOI - 10.1080/110241598750005958
Subject(s) - medicine , arteriovenous malformation , surgery , palpation , endoscopy , stomach , radiology
When conventional diagnostic tests fail to show thecause of gastrointestinal haemorrhage we must bear inmind the possibility of arteriovenous stulas.Since 1960 when Margolis et al. (11) showed inangiographic studies that arteriovenous stulas exist, anumber of authors have described angiomatous lesionsthat may be confused with arteriovenous ones (2, 9).Consequently, there is a need to describe how todifferentiate arteriovenous stulas from intestinalhaemangiomas. Haemangiomas are generally macro-scopic lesions that can easily be seen and some casesare detected by barium studies; they are palpablemasses found often in the stomach, small intestine, andrectum. Arteriovenous stulas, on the other hand, aremicroscopic lesions generally found in the right colonthat cannot be detected by palpation or by conventionaldiagnostic methods.When Meyer et al. (12) reviewed published reportsand documented 22 of their own cases in 1981, theyfound only 218 cases that involved arteriographicstudies.Our two cases, post-operatively conrmed to bearteriovenous stulas, serve to indicate not only theeffectiveness of laparoscopy to explore and treat thisdifcult condition, but also the complications that mayoccur even with minimally invasive surgery in elderlypatients with arteriovenous stulas and several life-threatening diseases.CASE 1A 25-year-old woman was admitted with a history ofintermittent rectal bleeding for several years with noother gastrointestinal symptoms. Her haemodynamicstate was stable, but her mucosa was pale. At digitalrectal exploration the nger was covered with redblood. Haematological analysis showed that she had anormocytic, normochromic anaemia. Endoscopy of theupper gastrointestinal tract, intestinal transit study, andcolonoscopy were within normal limits. Mesentericarteriography showed that the terminal branches of theileocaelic artery were tortuous and abnormally wide(Fig. 1). We decided to treat her laparoscopically.A Verres needle was introduced into the umbilicalregion under general anaesthesia, to induce pneumo-peritoneum. Three ports were used: a 10 mm one in theumbilicus, another 10 mm one in the left subcostal areain the midclavicular line, and a 5 mm one in the leftiliac fossa. We introduced the optic through theumbilical trocar to explore the entire intestine and theabdominal cavity and noted that the segment of ileumthat had looked abnormal on the arteriogram wasthickened. We exteriorised this loop through a McBur-ney’s incision, resected the diseased segment, anasto-mosed the two ends of healthy intestine extracorpore-