Gastric Tuberculosis Presenting as a Subepithelial Mass: A Rare Cause of Gastrointestinal Bleeding
Kim TU, Kim SJ, Ryu H, Kim JH, Jeong HS, Roh J, Yeom JA, Park BS, et al. (10 authors)
The Korean journal of gastroenterology = Taehan Sohwagi Hakhoe chi · 2018-12
Abstract
Gastric tuberculosis accounts for approximately 2% of all cases of gastrointestinal tuberculosis. Diagnosis of gastric tuberculosis is challenging because it can present with various clinical, endoscopic, and radiologic features. Tuberculosis manifesting as a gastric subepithelial tumor is exceedingly rare; only several dozen cases have been reported. A 30-year-old male visited emergency room of our hospital with hematemesis and melena. Abdominal CT revealed a 2.5 cm mass in the gastric antrum, and endoscopy revealed a subepithelial mass with a visible vessel at its center on gastric antrum. Primary gastric tuberculosis was diagnosed by surgical wedge resection. We report a rare case of gastric tuberculosis mimicking a subepithelial tumor with acute gastric ulcer bleeding.
MeSH terms
- Pyloric Antrum
- Humans
- Tuberculosis
- Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors
- Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage
- Diagnosis, Differential
- Tomography, X-Ray Computed
- Endoscopy, Digestive System
- Adult
- Male