Revista Española de Enfermedades Digestivas (original) (raw)
807-808
DOI: 10.17235/reed.2020.6748/2019
Diego Martínez-Acitores, Amaia Arrubla Gamboa, Eduardo Albéniz Arbizu, Alba Larrea Ramírez,
Abstract
A 61-year-old male with no relevant past medical history underwent a colonoscopy for routine screening of colorectal cancer. Colonoscopy revealed a pearly and hard submucosal lesion of less than 10 mm in diameter in the ascending colon, with normal mucosa. An abdominopelvic computed tomography (CT) scan was performed, which was normal. Endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) was performed and the lesion appeared to originate from the muscularis propia. Thus, the muscularis propia and part of the serosa of the colonic wall were cut and the perforation was finally closed with hemoclips.
New comment
Sending...
Comments
No comments for this article
References
1. Kyung S, Won J, Gwan B et al. Clinical and Endoscopic Features of Colonic Anisakiasis in Korea. Korean J Parasitol 2019; Vol. 57, No. 4: 411-415.
2. Hernandez-Prera J.C, Polydorides A.D. Anisakidosis of the sigmoid colon disguising as metastatic carcinoma: A case report and review of the literatura. Pathology – Research and Practice. Volume 208, Issue 7, 15 July 2012, Pages 433-435
3. Tamai Y, Kobayashi K. Asymptomatic Colonic Anisakiasis. Intern Med 54: 675, 2015.
Citation tools
Martínez-Acitores D, Arrubla Gamboa A, Albéniz Arbizu E, Larrea Ramírez A. Endoscopic submucosal dissection of colonic anisakiasis. 6748/2019
Download to a citation manager
Download the citation for this article by clicking on one of the following citation managers:
Metrics
This article has received 5119 visits.
This article has been downloaded 314 times.
Statistics from Dimensions
Statistics from Plum Analytics
Publication history
Received: 16/11/2019
Accepted: 12/12/2019
Online First: 21/09/2020
Published: 07/10/2020
Article revision time: 23 days
Article Online First time: 310 days
Article editing time: 326 days
Share
This article hasn't been rated yet.
Reader rating: