Endovascular treatment for bleeding gastroduodenal pseudoaneurysm after acute pancreatits

Main Article Content

Gian Luca Baiocchi
Tullio Piardi
Raffaele Cuomo
Giuseppe Battaglia
Maurizio Ronconi
Arianna Coniglio
Roberto Maroldi
Nazario Portolani

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Peripancreatic arterial pseudoaneurysm is a rare but potentially lethal complication of severe acute pancreatitis because it can massively bleed into the gastrointestinal tract. Since surgical treatment of such cases has a high mortality, percutaneous angiographic embolization of bleeding artery has recently been advocated as an alternative therapy. We report a case of acute pancreatitis complicated by gastrointestinal hemorrhage due to a ruptured gastroduodenal artery pseudoaneurysm, in which hemostasis was achieved by transcatheter arterial embolization.


CLINICAL CASE: A 65-year-old woman was transferred from another hospital with a diagnosis of severe acute biliary pancreatitis, and having had hematemesis. Upper GI endoscopy detected bleeding from the papilla of Vater, and CT showed hemorrhage in a pseudocyst at the pancreatic head. Angiography revealed active bleeding from an arterial pseudoaneurysm of the gastroduodenal artery: hematemesis was considered to result from rupture of the pseudoaneurysm (hemosuccus). Transcatheter arterial embolization was performed by a 2-step procedure, both through the celiac trunk, that was stenotic, and through the superior mesenteric artery, and hemostasis was achieved.


CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that transcatheter arterial embolization is a minimally invasive and highly effective treatment for acute bleeding from a ruptured pseudoaneurysm secondary to acute pancreatitis.

Article Details

How to Cite
Baiocchi, Gian Luca, et al. “Endovascular Treatment for Bleeding Gastroduodenal Pseudoaneurysm After Acute Pancreatits”. Annali Italiani Di Chirurgia, vol. 78, no. 2, Mar. 2007, pp. 145-8, https://annaliitalianidichirurgia.it/index.php/aic/article/view/2820.
Section
Case Report