Radiology Case Reports (Apr 2024)

A case of strangulated bowel obstruction in which transabdominal ultrasound was useful for preoperative diagnosis

  • Takako Konishi,
  • Noriaki Manabe,
  • Akihiro Shibuya,
  • Emiko Bukeo,
  • Jun Nakamura,
  • Minoru Fujita,
  • Hideyo Fujiwara,
  • Yuko Fukuhara,
  • Munenori Takaoka,
  • Takashi Akiyama,
  • Katsuya Kato,
  • Jiro Hata,
  • Ken Haruma,
  • Tomoki Yamatsuji

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 4
pp. 1480 – 1483

Abstract

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A 74-year-old man presented to the emergency department with the chief complaint of abdominal pain. A computed tomography scan showed paralytic ileus. An ileostomy tube was placed, but the symptoms of bowel obstruction did not improve. Two days after admission, the patient's renal function deteriorated. Transabdominal ultrasound (TUS) showed linear high-intensity echoes consistent with a fibrotic band and microbubbles suggestive of circulatory disturbance in the dilated intestinal tract. Subsequent contrast-enhanced ultrasound revealed circulatory disturbance of the small bowel wall. Emergency surgery was performed under the diagnosis of strangulated ileus. Intraoperative examination revealed that the terminal ileum was strangulated by a fibrotic band from the retroperitoneum, which was confirmed by TUS. The fibrotic band was resected, the strangulation was released, and ileocecal resection was performed. Postoperatively, intestinal peristalsis was rapidly restored. TUS was able to depict the fibrotic band, which could not be detected by a computed tomography scan, allowing the patient to undergo immediate surgical treatment. We herein report this case of strangulated bowel obstruction in which TUS and contrast-enhanced ultrasound were useful in preoperative assessment of the patient's condition.

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