Dieulafoy lesion
Appearance
An abnormally large gastric or duodenal submucosal artery at risk of causing erosion and bleeding
Epidemiology
[edit | edit source]- Accounts for 0.3-7% of non-variceal UGIB
Risk factors
[edit | edit source]- Occurs more commonly in med
- IHD
- CKD
- Diabetes
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Erosion of the superficial mucosa overlying the artery occurs secondary to pulsations of the large vessel
- Once exposed to gastric contents, bleeding occurs
- The mucosal defect is generally 2-5mm and surrounded by normal-appearing gastric mucosa, so can be hard to identify
- Generally occurs within 6cm of GOJ on the lesser curvature, but can also occur in duodenum
Presentation
[edit | edit source]- Classically - sudden-onset massive painless haematemesis
- Most patients present with haematemesis
Investigation
[edit | edit source]- Generally found on endoscopy for UGIB
- Intermittent bleeding - multiple endoscopies may be necessary
Management
[edit | edit source]- First-line - endoscopy
- Dual therapy - coagulation and haemoclip
- Can also do sclerotherapy or banding too
- Successful 80-100%
- Second-line - repeat endoscopy
- Third-line - transcatheter embolisation
- Most commonly left gastric artery
- Reasonably successful
- Last-line - surgery
- Gastric wedge resection
- Best done as a dual procedure with scope down to transilluminate resection margin
- Easier if it has been tattooed
- Could also underrun the vessel through a gastrotomy