Intestinal anisakiasis is not only a rare but also a difficult to diagnose parasitic disease. The symptoms are not specific and are often severe and abrupt; therefore, patients are sometimes diagnosed as having surgical abdomen. The clinical imaging findings are remarkable, including ascites, enteritis, ileus, eosinophilic granuloma and sometimes perforation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Colonoscopy is currently considered the optimal method to detect colorectal neoplasia; however, some adenomas remain undetected. While indigo carmine staining with a dye-spray catheter has demonstrated promising results for reducing the miss rate, we investigated the oral indigo carmine method. The aim of this study was to determine whether oral indigo carmine intake before standard colonoscopy increases the adenoma (and adenocarcinoma) detection rate (ADR) or the mean number of adenomas per patient (MAP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 77-year-old man hospitalized for epigastric pain showed jaundice of the skin and conjunctivae. Laboratory tests revealed elevated hepatobiliary enzymes and inflammatory markers, and imaging studies demonstrated a 12 cm hepatic cyst compressing the common bile duct. The diagnosis was a giant hepatic cyst causing obstructive jaundice.
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