A Woman with Black Beads in Her Stomach: Severe Gastric Ulceration Caused by Yttrium-90 Radioembolization
Autor: | James Luke Godwin, Edward Feller, Indu S. Voruganti, Alyn Adrain |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Lung Nausea business.industry Stomach lcsh:R Selective internal radiation therapy lcsh:Medicine Poison control Case Report General Medicine medicine.disease Gastroenterology 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine medicine.anatomical_structure Breast cancer Internal medicine medicine Vomiting 030211 gastroenterology & hepatology Gastritis medicine.symptom business |
Zdroj: | Case Reports in Medicine Case Reports in Medicine, Vol 2018 (2018) |
ISSN: | 1687-9635 1687-9627 |
DOI: | 10.1155/2018/1413724 |
Popis: | Radioembolization (RE) is a selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT) delivering targeted, high-dose, intra-arterial radiation directly to the vascular supply of liver tumors. Complications can occur due to aberrant deposition or migration of radiation microspheres into nontarget locations, including normal hepatic parenchyma, lungs, pancreas, and upper gastrointestinal (UGI) tract. We report a case of gastric ulcers due to yttrium-90 (90Y) seed migration to the stomach to alert clinicians to this rare cause of gastric injury. A 57-year-old woman with stage IV breast cancer with liver and lung metastases presented to the hospital with 2 months of worsening nausea and vomiting. Two months prior, she had received SIRT with 90Y microspheres without complications. Upper GI endoscopy showed diffuse gastritis and extensive antral ulceration. Biopsies revealed black, spherical foreign bodies, consistent with 90Y microspheres, documenting radiation injury. Radiation-induced UGI ulceration is caused by direct radiation injury from beta-radiation. Delay in diagnosis may be due to the nonspecificity of symptoms and temporal delay of symptom onset from SIRT, which was 2 months in our patient. Also, complaints may be attributed erroneously to adjuvant chemotherapy or widespread metastatic disease. Clinicians must consider radiation-associated toxicity in any SIRT-treated patient developing abdominal symptoms. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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