Ischemic Colitis Due to a Mesenteric Arteriovenous Malformation in a Patient with a Connective Tissue Disorder

Authors

  • Peter D. Poullos
  • Atalie Carina Thompson
  • Grant S. Holz
  • Lauren A. Edelman
  • R. Brooke Jeffrey

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v8i12.1843

Keywords:

Ischemic colitis, Arteriovenous malformation, Connective Tissue Disorder, CT, Computed Tomography

Abstract

Ischemic colitis is a rare, life-threatening, consequence of mesenteric arteriovenous malformations. Ischemia ensues from a steal phenomenon through shunting, and may be compounded by the resulting portal hypertension. Computed tomographic angiography is the most common first-line test because it is quick, non-invasive, and allows for accurate anatomic characterization. Also, high-resolution three-dimensional images can be created for treatment planning. Magnetic resonance angiography is similarly sensitive for vascular mapping. Conventional angiography remains the gold standard for diagnosis and also allows for therapeutic endovascular embolization. Our patient underwent testing using all three of these modalities. We present the first reported case of this entity in a patient with a vascular connective tissue disorder.

Author Biographies

Peter D. Poullos

Department of Radiology, Clinical Assistant Professor

Atalie Carina Thompson

School of Medicine, M.D.

Grant S. Holz

Department of Radiology, Resident

Lauren A. Edelman

Department of Pathology, Resident

R. Brooke Jeffrey

Department of Radiology, Professor

Published

2014-12-14

Issue

Section

Gastrointestinal Radiology