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PRIMITIVE MESENTERIC CLAMP SYNDROME : UNUSUAL CAUSE OF UPPER GASTROINTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Author(s) -
Riyad Abbas,
Khalid Rabbani,
A. Louzi,
B. Finech
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of advanced research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2320-5407
DOI - 10.21474/ijar01/12880
Subject(s) - medicine , superior mesenteric artery syndrome , vomiting , context (archaeology) , forceps , surgery , abdominal pain , paleontology , biology
The syndrome of the mesenteric clamp or Wilkies syndrome is defined by a compression of the third duodenum between the superior mesenteric artery, and the aorta . The symptoms are variable and non specific. Management is based first on medical treatment with recourse most often to surgery if failure. We report a review of the literature by reporting an observation of a case. Observation: This is a 27-year-old patient with a history of intermittent chronic vomiting since the age of 16, unexplored, who for the past 1 year has been worsening vomiting becoming persistent with epigastralgia. gravity, evolving in a context of deterioration of the general state and slimming. A high gastrointestinal endoscopy that showed significant gastric stasis, injected abdominal CT found a disparity in caliber against D3. An upper gastrointestinal fluoroscopy showed gastric stasis with a stomach reaching the pelvis. The management consisted in a surgical treatment after failure of the medical treatment with good evolution. The mesenteric forceps syndrome is a rare and benign condition. Positive diagnosis is hard on the scanner. The treatment is medical in the first place but the use of surgery is common.

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