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Hemobilia in a patient with arteriobiliary fistula after liver contusion

Dear Editor,

We report the case of a 25-year-old male patient with a history of blunt abdominal trauma (from a motorcycle accident), who presented with abdominal pain. Full abdominal computed tomography (CT) with intravenous contrast administration revealed that the patient had grade 2 liver contusion in the right lobe. Because the patient was hemodynamically stable, we opted for conservative treatment. However, he evolved to hemodynamic instability. An exploratory laparotomy revealed a mosaic pattern of liver injury, which was treated with hepatorrhaphy. On the eighth day after surgery, the patient was in a stable, lucid state and was discharged. However, he returned 17 days later with abdominal pain after a large meal, together with voluminous hematemesis and hypovolemic shock. We then performed abdominal CT angiography (Figure 1), which revealed a pseudoaneurysm in the right hepatic artery, in close proximity to the liver contusion. There was also spontaneously hyperdense content within the gallbladder, suggesting arteriobiliary fistula. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy showed blood clots and active bleeding in the papilla of Vater, and arteriography (performed at a different facility) confirmed the existence of pseudoaneurysm in the right hepatic artery in the sub-branch of liver segment V, with contrast extravasation suggestive of rupture. Therefore, embolization was carried out.

Figure 1
A: Noncontrast axial CT showing spontaneously hyperdense (possibly hematic) material in the interior of the gallbladder. B: Axial CT after intravenous contrast administration, with MIP, showing arterial lesion due to local liver contusion, with a probable communication between the artery and the biliary duct. C: Volumetric reconstruction (arterial phase) showing a pseudoaneurysm/contrast extravasation in a branch of the right hepatic artery (arrow). D: Arteriography with embolization and total exclusion of the pseudoaneurysm and of the arterial rupture, the final result being angiographic success.

Hemobilia is an uncommon condition and is one of the differential diagnoses of upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage(11 Cho CJ, Kim YG, Lee SG, et al. Inflammatory and noninflammatory vascular disease causing hemobilia. J Clin Rheumatol. 2011;17:138-41.). There are many causes of hemobilia, such as iatrogenic and accidental traumas, as well as gallstones, inflammation, vascular malformations, and tumors(22 Xu ZB, Zhou XY, Peng ZY, et al. Evaluation of selective hepatic angiography and embolization in patients with massive hemobilia. Hepatobiliary Pancreat Dis Int. 2005;4:254-8.). The clinical manifestations of hemobilia are determined by the quantity and velocity of the hemorrhage within the biliary tract. Its symptoms are jaundice, right hypochondrium pain, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage (ranging from chronic bleeding, resulting in anemia, to massive bleeding with hypotension), and it can develop several months after a trauma(44 Dobbins JM, Rao PM, Novelline RA. Posttraumatic hemobilia. Emergency Radiology. 1997;4:180-3.,55 Wani NA, Gojwari TA, Khan NA, et al. Hemobilia in a child due to right hepatic artery pseudoaneurysm: multidetector-row computed tomography demonstration. Saudi J Gastroenterol. 2011;17:152-4.).

The improvement of radiological techniques has been fundamental in the diagnosis and treatment of hemobilia, especially in cases of traumatic pseudoaneurysms(33 Queiroz HMC, Costa FA, Campos Junior MM, et al. Arterial embolization in the treatment of hemobilia after hepatic trauma: a case report. Radiol Bras. 2012;45:63-4.). In patients with upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy is the examination of choice, because it can identify blood clots in the ampulla of Vater and rule out other causes of bleeding. Ultrasound is a rapid, noninvasive method that is useful and effective in the detection of hemobilia, potentially revealing blood clots or echogenic intraluminal material in the biliary tree or gallbladder. However, contrast-enhanced CT (in the arterial phase) can detect pseudoaneurysms, obstruction of the common biliary duct, and intrahepatic cavities that may require surgical debridement(33 Queiroz HMC, Costa FA, Campos Junior MM, et al. Arterial embolization in the treatment of hemobilia after hepatic trauma: a case report. Radiol Bras. 2012;45:63-4.).

For cases of severe gastrointestinal bleeding in which there is a risk of death, the diagnostic procedure of choice is hepatic angiography, because it allows selective embolization of the appropriate vascular branches, preserving maximum liver parenchyma function. Transcatheter arterial embolization is used as an isolated form of treatment or as a way to keep the patient hemodynamically stable for definitive surgery, minimizing morbidity and mortality(66 Fontes CER, Mardegan MJ, Prado Filho OR, et al. Tratamento não operatório de hemobilia por ferimento de arma branca - relato de caso. GED Gastroenterol Endosc Dig. 2013;32:57-9.,77 Sandblom P. Why should every physician know about hemobilia? West J Med. 1991;155:660.).

Currently, embolization of the hepatic artery is the gold standard treatment, due to its 80-100% success rate in controlling hemorrhage and its low rates of morbidity and mortality(22 Xu ZB, Zhou XY, Peng ZY, et al. Evaluation of selective hepatic angiography and embolization in patients with massive hemobilia. Hepatobiliary Pancreat Dis Int. 2005;4:254-8.,88 Forlee MV, Krige JE, Welman CJ, et al. Haemobilia after penetrating and blunt liver injury: treatment with selective hepatic artery embolisation. Injury. 2004;35:23-8.). However, there are reports of fatal hepatic necrosis and the formation of intrahepatic abscess following embolization(88 Forlee MV, Krige JE, Welman CJ, et al. Haemobilia after penetrating and blunt liver injury: treatment with selective hepatic artery embolisation. Injury. 2004;35:23-8.). Technical failures may occur in cases of anomalous origin of the hepatic artery, previous surgery, vascular tortuosity, or previous ligation of the proximal vessel. In the case presented here, the patient underwent selective transcatheter embolization and remained in outpatient follow-up, with no abdominal pain and with resolution of the hemobilia.

REFERENCES

  • 1
    Cho CJ, Kim YG, Lee SG, et al. Inflammatory and noninflammatory vascular disease causing hemobilia. J Clin Rheumatol. 2011;17:138-41.
  • 2
    Xu ZB, Zhou XY, Peng ZY, et al. Evaluation of selective hepatic angiography and embolization in patients with massive hemobilia. Hepatobiliary Pancreat Dis Int. 2005;4:254-8.
  • 3
    Queiroz HMC, Costa FA, Campos Junior MM, et al. Arterial embolization in the treatment of hemobilia after hepatic trauma: a case report. Radiol Bras. 2012;45:63-4.
  • 4
    Dobbins JM, Rao PM, Novelline RA. Posttraumatic hemobilia. Emergency Radiology. 1997;4:180-3.
  • 5
    Wani NA, Gojwari TA, Khan NA, et al. Hemobilia in a child due to right hepatic artery pseudoaneurysm: multidetector-row computed tomography demonstration. Saudi J Gastroenterol. 2011;17:152-4.
  • 6
    Fontes CER, Mardegan MJ, Prado Filho OR, et al. Tratamento não operatório de hemobilia por ferimento de arma branca - relato de caso. GED Gastroenterol Endosc Dig. 2013;32:57-9.
  • 7
    Sandblom P. Why should every physician know about hemobilia? West J Med. 1991;155:660.
  • 8
    Forlee MV, Krige JE, Welman CJ, et al. Haemobilia after penetrating and blunt liver injury: treatment with selective hepatic artery embolisation. Injury. 2004;35:23-8.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Nov-Dec 2018
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