Background: Dieulafoy's disease (exulceratio simplex) is an uncommon cause of gastric hemorrhage as a result of an abnormally large, submucosal, eroded gastric artery, often located in the upper part of the stomach. It represents a clinical challenge because of the intermittent nature of massive bleeding accounting for a constantly fatal course in conservatively (nonsurgically or nonendoscopically) treated patients. Published therapeutic options include techniques of endoscopic hemostasis or operative procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFifty-three patients with previously uninvestigated chronic dyspepsia symptoms in the absence of gastrointestinal or extra-gastrointestinal disease (functional dyspepsia) underwent antral and duodenal mucosal biopsies to detect the role of such samplings in the presence of normal endoscopic findings. Patients were enrolled in a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial, receiving either eradicating treatment (colloidal bismuth subcitrate plus metronidazole) or placebo if they had Helicobacter pylori-associated gastritis (20 patients), or cisapride or placebo if they had normal antral mucosa (28 cases). Unsuspected celiac sprue was found in one patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Gastroenterol
June 1992
Pyogenic abscesses of the liver occur in association with a variety of diseases. Sometimes they are caused by anaerobic infections of liver metastases. Uncommonly, however, multiple hepatic abscesses caused by anaerobic bacteria are the presenting signs of unsuspected colonic cancer in the absence of liver metastases.
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