Toothpick Ingestion Causing Gastric Submucosal Mass and Abscess
Author(s) -
Daniel J. Waintraub,
Lionel DʼSouza,
Emilio Madrigal,
Neil D. Theise,
Evin McCabe,
Jason Bratcher
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
acg case reports journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.112
H-Index - 4
ISSN - 2326-3253
DOI - 10.14309/crj.2016.86
Subject(s) - medicine , curvatures of the stomach , stomach , abscess , endoscopic ultrasound , gist , radiology , foreign body , anatomy , stromal tumor , pathology , surgery , stromal cell
A 69 year-old man presented with generalized abdominal pain. As part of the workup, an upper endoscopy was performed, which revealed a submucosal mass in the distal body of the stomach along the greater curvature (Figure 1). Endoscopic ultrasound demonstrated a hypoechoic, heterogeneous, and calcified oval submucosal mass with undefined borders, which appeared to originate from the muscularis propria (Figure 2). The lesion was 20 mm in diameter. The endosonographic features were not typical for a gastrointestinal (GI) stromal tumor. Fine-needle aspiration of the mass was performed with one pass using a 22-gauge needle, which was negative for malignant cells and was otherwise nonspecific. Abdominal computed tomography was then performed and showed a 2.9 x 3.5-cm soft tissue mass arising from the greater curvature of the body of the stomach
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