Title of article :
Acute mesenteric ischaemia: A case of expedited diagnosis and management using point-of-care ultrasound
Author/Authors :
Schmidt, Jessica Department of Emergency Medicine - University of Wisconsin - Madison - WI , USA , Crosby, Jill Department of Emergency Medicine - University of Wisconsin - Madison - WI , USA , Werku, Dagmawi Department of Emergency Medicine - Black Lion Hospital - Addis Ababa, Ethiopia , Zewdu, Tigist Department of Emergency Medicine - Black Lion Hospital - Addis Ababa, Ethiopia , Wanjiku, Grace Department of Emergency Medicine - Brown University - Providence - RI , USA
Pages :
3
From page :
164
To page :
166
Abstract :
The term acute abdomen refers to a clinical syndrome of sudden onset, severe abdominal pain. The differential diagnosis for this presentation is broad, but most cases require emergent medical or surgical management. Especially in cases of ischaemic bowel, time to diagnosis can mean the difference between survival and death. As a result, mortality remains high in resource-limited settings. Case report We describe the case of a 28-year-old male who presented to an urban Ethiopian emergency centre with three days of vomiting, bloody diarrhoea, and abdominal pain. He collapsed in triage with weak pulses and an undetectable blood pressure. Point-of-care ultrasound revealed a hyperechoic, mobile mass in the left ventricle of the heart. Small bowel dilation and thickening was visualised throughout the abdomen. Mesenteric ischaemia was rapidly identified as the working diagnosis, prompting early surgical consultation and aggressive, goal-directed resuscitation. Discussion Short of elucidating a definitive diagnosis, ultrasound narrowed the focus of an undifferentiated presentation and supported mobilisation for exploratory laparotomy. Ultimately, this circumvented several hours of time which is conventionally required to obtain computed tomography at this institution. As demonstrated in this case, point-of-care ultrasound can be life-saving in resource-limited settings where acquisition time for definitive imaging is often prohibitive.
Keywords :
Thromboembolism , Acute abdomen , Point-of-care , Ultrasound , Mesenteric ischaemia , Bowel necrosis , Resource-limited
Journal title :
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year :
2018
Full Text URL :
Record number :
2618831
Link To Document :
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