Journal of Acute Disease (Oct 2015)

Acute chest pain in a patient with a non-strangulated hiatal hernia

  • Alexander John Scumpia,
  • Megan Elizabeth Dekok,
  • Daniel Michael Aronovich,
  • Gurpaul Bajwa,
  • Randy Barros,
  • Randy Katz,
  • Jordan Ditchek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joad.2015.06.016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. 344 – 346

Abstract

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Acute chest pain resulting in spontaneous idiopathic hemomediastinum is a rare, potentially life-threatening occurrence. Acute chest pain is a common chief complaint of patients, accounting for 2.4%–6.0% of adult emergency room visits. The clinician's differential diagnoses for acute chest pain rarely include complications of hiatal hernias. An 83-year-old male presented with acute chest pain and was emergently diagnosed with hemomediastinum secondary to spontaneous gastric mesenteric vessel rupture due to a non-strangulated hiatal hernia after physical exertion.

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