The significance of gastric and duodenal histological ischemia reported on endoscopic biopsy

2011 
Although frequently reported, it is unknown whether pathological reports of ischemia obtained from gastroduodenal biopsies suggest a diagnosis, prognosis or a requirement for additional evaluation. The aim of this study was to review the natural history, clinical presentation, endoscopic appearance, treatments, and major clinical outcomes of patients with gastroduodenal ischemia. A case series of 14 patients with variable etiologies (seven gastric and seven duodenal) was obtained from a search of our endoscopic pathological database for reports of histological ischemia. The results were as follows. The most common presentation was upper gastrointestinal bleeding (71 %). Half of the endoscopic lesions appeared very severe (large or circumferential lesions, exudative, pseudomembranous, black or pale mucosa). There were six cases of rebleeding (43 %) and four deaths (29 %). Computed tomography scanning was frequently used (12 cases, 86 %), but led to an underlying diagnosis in only three cases. In our series, patients with underlying vascular pathology have substantial 6-month mortality (29 %).
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