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CASE REPORT
An interesting cause of collapse in a patient with chronic pancreatitis
  1. Michael Sawrey1,
  2. Richard Glyn Hughes2
  1. 1Department of Emergency, Stepping Hill Hospital, Stockport, Cheshire, UK
  2. 2Department of Emergency, Aintree University Hospital, Liverpool, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr Michael Sawrey, mikesawrey{at}doctors.org.uk

Summary

A 55-year-old man attended the emergency department following an episode of collapse. He was known to have chronic pancreatitis and a pancreatic pseudocyst. He had recently been recumbent due to chronic abdominal pain. On arrival he was unwell. Baseline observations revealed an oxygen saturation of 87% on room air, pulse 115 bpm and blood pressure 86/57 mm Hg. Physical examination was unremarkable except for mild abdominal tenderness. He was started on high-flow oxygen, intravenous fluid and broad-spectrum antibiotics. A chest x-ray was unremarkable. Massive pulmonary embolus was considered a likely diagnosis. The patient underwent an urgent CT pulmonary angiogram (CTPA). As this was undertaken as an urgent investigation straight from the resuscitation area a d-dimer test was not performed. The CTPA showed no evidence of pulmonary embolism but demonstrated a subdiaphragmatic collection. An arterial phase abdominal CT scan was thus performed, which confirmed a large subcapsular splenic haematoma and splenic vein thrombosis. The patient was resuscitated with blood products and transferred for splenic artery embolisation.

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