Diagnosis
Stomal bleed in a TIPS patient
Findings
The right internal jugular vein was accessed using ultrasound
guidance with a micropuncture needle, and a 5F sheath was placed.
Over a 0.035-inch angled glide wire, a 5F Cobra 2 catheter
(AngioDynamics Inc., Queensbury, NY) was passed into the right
atrium, inferior vena cava (IVC), and portal vein, and venous
pressures were recorded. The right hepatic vein to right portal
vein TIPS stent was patent. A digital portogram was obtained
(Figure 1). The pressures measured were as follows: portal vein 14
mm Hg, proximal shunt 9 mm Hg, mid shunt 6 mm Hg, and IVC 5 mm Hg.
The portosystemic gradient was 9 mm Hg. Hepatofugal flow into a
large inferior mesenteric vein and stomal varices was identified.
The main stomal varix was selected using a 5F H1 catheter (Cook
Inc., Bloomington, IN) (Figure 2). The H1 was exchanged for a
65-cm, 5F angled glide catheter, and embolization of the stomal
varices was performed. A total of 4 mL of absolute ethanol was
infused until hemostasis was achieved in the stomal varices (Figure
3). The catheter was removed, and the right internal jugular
venotomy site was closed with 2-0 Ethilon suture (Ethicon, a
Johnson & Johnson Co., Somerville, NJ). Immediate hemostasis
was achieved, and the patient tolerated the procedure well.
The patient remained hemodynamically stable, and no further
variceal hemorrhage was identified. The patient was discharged from
the hospital and is currently living in a nursing facility. At
8-week follow-up after the variceal embolization, the patient had
not had recurrent bleeding.
Discussion
Patients with portal hypertension and surgical ostomies may
occasionally develop stomal varices. The risk of death from
bleeding in these patients is 3% to 4%.
1 The varices
form because of the anastomosis between the high-pressure portal
system and the relatively low-pressure venous system of the
abdominal wall.
2 In 1968, Resnick
3 first
described stomal hemorrhage from ostomy varices in 3 patients who
had undergone colostomies.
Stomal variceal bleeding is difficult to definitively treat.
Even with endoscopy, the bleeding site may be difficult to locate
and treat, and mesenteric angiography is often needed to pinpoint
the bleeding site. Treatment options include suture ligation,
colostomy revision, sclerotherapy, TIPS, surgical shunt creation,
and percutaneous embolization.4 Stomal surgery may yield
temporary success in the control of bleeding. However, multiple
transfusions may be required. In addition, local surgical
corrective measures can lead to scarring or stomal
dysfunction.5 Surgical decompression of the portal
venous system with a surgical shunt or TIPS placement is usually
effective in preventing and controlling variceal hemorrhage.
However, this treatment option may exacerbate liver failure or
hepatic encephalopathy.6
Our patient had undergone prior colostomy revision and
sclerotherapy treatments but was rejected for a liver transplant
because of alcohol abuse. To our knowledge, this is the only
patient who has a patent TIPS who failed all other treatment
options with continued hemorrhage from the ostomy site. As a
result, transjugular variceal embolization was performed with
infusion of absolute ethanol until thrombosis of colostomy varices
was achieved. Embolization with absolute ethanol was
performed--rather than coils or gelfoam--because of its relative
toxicity to the endothelium and greater prevention of angiogenesis,
thus preventing recanalization and subsequent bleeding.
The transjugular route was used since a patent TIPS was in
place. This route is safer than the transhepatic route used in
patients without TIPS because of the risks of infection and liver
and biliary trauma associated with transhepatic access. Usually,
patients with portal hypertension and variceal bleeding have
significant reduction in bleeding with the TIPS procedure as a
result of venous decompression. In this patient, there was no
decompression of the stomal veins despite normal portal pressures.
We hypothesize that given the moderate portal vein pressures, the
patient's colonic stricture proximal to the bleeding varices may
have created an increased pressure gradient within the stoma,
contributing to varices development. Embolization with absolute
ethanol resulted in direct thrombosis of the stomal varices, with
no evidence of bleeding.
CONCLUSION
In a patient with a refractory stomal bleed and an existing
TIPS, transjugular embolization of stomal varices is an effective
treatment. Prior to treatment, a transjugular portovenogram with
venous pressure and TIPS assessment should be performed. This
approach to diagnosis and treatment of a stomal bleed proved to be
successful in this patient.
- Ackerman NB, Graeber GM, Fey J. Enterostomal varices secondary
to portal hypertension: Progression of disease in conservatively
managed cases. Arch Surg. 1980;115:1454-1455.
- Samaraweera RN, Feldman L, Widrich WC, et al. Stomal varices:
Percutaneous transhepatic embolization. Radiology.
1989;170:779-782.
- Resnick RH, Ishihara A, Chalmers TC, Schimmel EM. A controlled
trial of colon bypass in chronic hepatic encephalopathy.
Gastroenterology. 1968;54:1057-1069.
- Ahari HK, Feldman L, Kaufman J, Gianturco LE. Vascular and
interventional case of the day. Peristomal varices. AJR Am J
Roentgenol. 1999;173:829, 831-832.
- Samaraweera RN, Feldman L, Widrich WC, et al. Stomal varices:
Percutaneous transhepatic embolization. Radiology.1989;170(3 Pt
1):779-782.
- Kishimoto K, Hara A, Arita T, et al. Stomal varices: Treatment
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