Ménétrier's disease : A new variant with duodenal involvement

1997 
Menetrier's disease is a rare cause of hypertrophic gastropathy, usually confined to gastric body and fundus, which is characterized by giant rugae, hypoalbuminemia, and foveolar hyperplasia. The etiology of this disease is still unknown. We report a case of a 74-yr-old man who had dyspepsia, hypoalbuminemia, weight loss, and diffuse polypoid, nodular lesions affecting the whole stomach and proximal duodenum on gastroscopy and barium meal study. The histology of gastric and duodenal mucosal lesions fulfilled the diagnosis of Menetrier's disease, that was not described to involve duodenum in the literature. The disease resolved clinically, endoscopically, and pathologically after therapy with famotidine for 3 months. We speculated that extensive pyloric metaplasia and then foveolar hyperplasia of duodenum in this patient might be a variant of Menetrier's disease with favorable clinical course.
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