
Hemosuccus pancreaticus treated with gastroduodenopancreatectomy: a case report and review of literature
Author(s) -
Bruno Y Yoshida,
Ytauan B Calheiros,
Carlos A. Q. Santos,
Evandro J Santo,
Sandra L Peres,
Ronaldo Almeida Soares,
Fernanda Maricondi,
Renato Arioni,
José Francisco de Mattos Farah,
Alfredo Bonini Neto
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
oncology, gastroenterology and hepatology reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2348-3113
pISSN - 2278-8921
DOI - 10.5530/ogh.2012.1.13
Subject(s) - medicine , embolization , acute pancreatitis , pancreatitis , upper gastrointestinal bleeding , radiology , gastroduodenal artery , abdominal pain , endoscopy , complication , pseudoaneurysm , surgery , aneurysm , artery
Hemosuccus pancreaticus
is a rare cause of upper gastrointestinal bleeding and usually occurs
as a complication of chronic or acute pancreatitis. Its recognition requires a high clinical suspicious, and
sometimes the complementary exams are only suggestive but not definitive for diagnosis. The treatment
strategy depends on the cause of the
hemosuccus pancreaticus
.
Case Report:
We report a patient with
chronic pancreatitis that presented acute abdominal pain and acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding. An upper
digestive endoscopy showed an active bleeding from the major duodenal papillae, leading the diagnosing
of
hemosuccus pancreaticus
. An abdominal Angio-CT scan identified a gastroduodenal artery aneurism,
followed with embolization of this aneurism. Due to recurrence of bleeding, the patient was submitted to a
gastroduodenopancreatectomy, as a rescue measure after embolization failure.
Conclusion:
The diagnosis for
hemosuccus pancreaticus
requires a high clinical suspicious, once the visualization of an active bleeding during
an upper digestive endoscopy occurs in the minority of cases. Angioembolization is the initial therapy in many
cases, but sometimes surgical procedures are mandatory for a definitive treatment