CASE 10051 Published on 18.04.2012

Gastric pneumatosis

Section

Abdominal imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

La Pietra P, Sommario M, Marchini N, Bovo L

U.O.C Radiologia Area Nord Asl Bologna;
Via Marconi 40121 Bentivoglio, Italy;
Email:plapietra@tin.it
Patient

52 years, male

Categories
Area of Interest Abdomen ; Imaging Technique Conventional radiography, CT, Image manipulation / Reconstruction
Clinical History
A 42-year-old man was admitted to E.R. for postprandial abdominal pain, bloating nausea, vomiting.
He had a prior history of frequently epigastric pain for about 5 months. He underwent gastroscopy a few days before. Clinical examination showed abdominal distension with mild tenderness without rigidity. The rest of the examination was unremarkable.
Imaging Findings
The plain abdominal film showed a significant gastric dilatation and a subtle arcuate line of radiolucency, parallel to great curvature of the stomach.
Dilatation of bowel loops and air-fluid levels were not present.
For excluding pneumoperitoneum, a CT examination was performed, which showed: multiple bubble air within the wall of the stomach and a lesser distension of the stomach.
This radiologic finding can indicate a potentially lethal process; however, clinical features and the improvement of symptoms after placement of the nasogastric tube are not suggestive of a life-threatening condition.
Pending the result of gastric biopsy, the surgeon has decided to defer enhanced CT. The result of biopsy was positive for cancerisation of gastric ulcer.
Preoperative CT staging showed a wall thickening with stricture of the antrum of stomach.
The patient underwent surgery with partial gastrectomy.
Discussion
Pneumatosis is a descriptive term that indicates the presence of gas within the intestinal wall [1]; this condition is very rare and can occur in any part of the gut. [2-3]. The gastric pneumatosis (GP) is the less frequent, its incidence is of 9% of all pneumatoses [4].
First described in 1889 by Fraenkel, it can affect both adults and children; both sexes are affected and it is most frequent after the age of 40. The pathogenesis is unclear; several explanations have been proposed:
The presence of gas within gastric wall is probably due to elevated intraluminal pressure or by mucosal injury that allows penetration to intraluminal gas. Penetration in the intestinal wall of gas producing microorganisms. The gas reaches the gastric wall from extra-gastric sources by sectioning the interstitial planes [3-4].
Numerous aetiologies of GP have been described in the literature. In children it is frequently associated to pyloric stenosis, gastric malrotation, anular pancreas and not correct positioning of feeding catheters. In adulthood, frequently it is due to iatrogenic injury during endoscopy or gastric outlet obstruction; much less often intestinal ischaemia or infarction. More rare causes are gastric infection or caustic ingestion.
Clinical presentation is variable; the symptoms are not due to GP, but to underlying pathologic processes [3-4].
Based on aetiology, clinical presentation and prognosis GP can be categorised under two headings 1. Gastric emphysema can be a benign self-limiting condition following a gastric endoscopy, usually asymptomatic. More rarely it is due to gastric outlet obstruction for chronic peptic ulcer, cancer of stomach, duodenum or pancreas [4]. In these cases the symptoms (abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting) are due to gastric dilatation. 2. Emphysematous gastritis is a very rare but grave variant caused by local infection by gas-forming microorganisms. Patients usually present severe abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, haematemesis, fever, tachycardia and septic shock.
The diagnosis of GP is usually made by abdominal radiography or CT examination. CT is more sensitive in detecting the GP, evaluating the entire abdominal cavity can help to acknowledge the underlying pathologic process [2, 3, 4]. Although a linear radiolucency is usually bound to gastric emphysema and the thickening of the gastric wall with mottled gas bubbles is associated to emphysematous gastritis; these radiologic features are not specific enough to distinguish between a relatively benign disease and a condition of life-threatening [4]
Treatment options depend on the underlying pathology.
In many cases, conservative treatment is sufficient for [4] life support, antibiotic therapy or surgery may be necessary in other cases.
Differential Diagnosis List
Gastric pneumatosis due to gastric outlet obstruction
Pneumoperitoneum
Gastric emphysema
Emphysematous gastritis
Final Diagnosis
Gastric pneumatosis due to gastric outlet obstruction
Case information
URL: https://eurorad.org/case/10051
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.10051
ISSN: 1563-4086