Medical Journal of Clinical Trials & Case Studies (MJCCS)

ISSN: 2578-4838

Case Report

Small Bowel Perforation at the Duodeno-Jejunal Junction from a Migrated Biliary Stent: A Case Report

Authors: Mohamed AA* and Zaher MAA

DOI: 10.23880/mjccs-16000354

Abstract

Background: The most common sites of reported bowel perforation secondary to migrated biliary stents were duodenal or colonic. However, small bowel perforations were reported in a few cases. Herein we present a case of small bowel perforation secondary to migrated biliary plastic stent at the duodeno-jejunal junction (DJ). We think this peculiar site is the first to be reported as a perforation site secondary to migrated biliary stent. Case Presentation: We present the case of female Egyptian patient with severe abdominal pain and air under diaphragm after Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) for Klatskin tumor. The patient underwent a midline laparotomy. A moderate collection of enteric fluid was encountered with migrated stent causing perforation of the small intestine at DJ. The stent was removed, and primary closure was done. The patient could not be extubated due to bad chest condition and admitted to ICU for 48 hours then extubated after improvement of the chest condition and ability of the patient to maintain good oxygen saturation in room air. Unfortunately, the patient developed massive pulmonary embolism on the fifth postoperative day and died. Conclusion: Suspicion of stent migration should be put in mind in any patient presented with abdominal pain with history of previous ERCP and biliary stenting. Endoscopic removal and mucosal repair are possible in select cases. This is still not available for DJ or small bowel. Further research and future innovations may overcome this challenge.

Keywords: Bowel Perforation; Duodeno-Jejunal Perforation; ERCP; Migrated Biliary Stent

View PDF

Google_Scholar_logo Academic Research index asi ISI_logo logo_wcmasthead_en scilitLogo_white F1 search-result-logo-horizontal-TEST cas_color europub infobase logo_world_of_journals_no_margin