Article Text

Unusual presentation of more common disease/injury
A case of fulminant diversion pan-colitis presenting 19 years after colonic diversion for neuronal intestinal dysplasia
  1. Deya Nawrani1,
  2. Philip Turton2,
  3. Dermot Burke3
  1. 1
    Leeds Teaching Hospitals, Breast and General Surgery, 68 Wensley Road, Leeds LS7 2LS, UK
  2. 2
    Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Breast and General Surgery, Leeds General Infirmary, Great George Street, Leeds LS1 3EX, UK
  3. 3
    Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Colorectal and General Surgery, Leeds General Infirmary, Great George Street, Leeds LS1 3EX, UK
  1. Deya Nawrani, deyanawrani{at}doctors.org.uk

Summary

A 20-year old woman with a long history of abdominal symptoms presented with acute abdominal pain associated with nausea and vomiting. She had had a right iliac fossa end-ileostomy previously fashioned at the age of 11 months for neuronal intestinal dysplasia. A few days after her admission she suffered a hypokalaemic cardiac arrest from which she was resuscitated. Her clinical condition deteriorated as she became increasingly septic. She was diagnosed with a fulminant colitis based on the clinical picture and the finding of fluid filled, thick walled rectum suggestive of proctocolitis on a pelvic magnetic resonance imaging scan. She was taken to the operating theatre where she had a subtotal colectomy. The histopathological diagnosis was that of fulminant diversion colitis. The patient recovered from surgery and was discharged home 5 weeks later.

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests: none.

  • Patient consent: Patient/guardian consent was obtained for publication