Back to Search Start Over

A hematoma confined to the center of the abdomen

Authors :
Chien-Cheng Chen
Cheng-Hsien Hsieh
Jih-Chang Chen
Chih-Huang Li
Mon-Ing Tsai
Te-Fa Chiu
Source :
Signa vitae : journal for intesive care and emergency medicine, Volume 6, Issue 1
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Pharmamed Mado Ltd., 2011.

Abstract

Spontaneous rupture of a hepatocellular carcinoma is a rare and lethal complication in the emergency department. A cau-date lobe hepatoma rupture is even rarer. It can be treated with vascular embolization, surgical intervention or supportive care. A 70-year-old woman with underlying hepatocellular carcinoma presented to our emergency department with severe abdominal pain encompassing the entire region for half a day. Abdominal computer tomography scans with and without contrast medium revealed a large hematoma confined to the lesser sac of the abdomen. It was initially diagnosed as a ruptured aneurysm. A ruptured caudate lobe hepatoma with acute hemorrhage into the lesser sac was diagnosed after reviewing and discussing the imaging findings with the radiologist. The patient was treated with supportive care without vascular embolization or surgical intervention because there was no imaging evidence of active contrast extravasation and the vital signs were within the normal range. After reviewing the literature, our case appears to be the second only case treated with supportive care and discharged without complications.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1845206X and 13345605
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Signa vitae : journal for intesive care and emergency medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c279285c691a29de06ea761e2edfbe89