A130 RETROGRADE ENDOSCOPIC ULTRASOUND-GUIDED ENTERO-ENTEROSTOMY USING A LUMEN-APPOSING METAL STENT FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF A HIGH-OUTPUT ENTEROCUTANEOUS FISTULA AND ILEAL STRICTURE IN A COMPLEX SURGICAL ABDOMEN
S Gupta, S Gupta, K Pawlak, J De Rezende-Neto, G May, J Mosko, N Calo

TL;DR
A novel endoscopic technique using a metal stent successfully managed a complex abdominal injury in a trauma patient.
Contribution
A new application of retrograde EUS-guided entero-enterostomy with a lumen-apposing metal stent in a high-risk post-surgical trauma case.
Findings
The procedure bypassed a high-output enterocutaneous fistula and a severe ileal stricture.
Colostomy output returned and fistula output diminished after stent deployment.
The technique enabled a single-step anastomosis in a complex surgical abdomen.
Abstract
A 26-year-old male sustained significant traumatic thoracoabdominal injuries following a gunshot. He underwent several laparotomies, small bowel resections, an extended left hemicolectomy with end-colostomy formation, and a flap to close the abdomen. He subsequently developed a high-output enterocutaneous fistula (ECF) and loss of colostomy output. CT imaging confirmed an ECF from the ileum to the anterior abdominal wall and a severe ileal stricture distal to the fistula. In the context of his complex surgical abdomen and proximity of the ECF to the abdominal flap, surgical re-intervention was deemed high-risk. He was placed on total parenteral nutrition and referred for endoscopic management. Under fluoroscopic guidance, we injected methylene blue & contrast dye from the skin side of the ECF. A dilated segment of small bowel was filled, with no downstream passage of contrast (Fig…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEsophageal and GI Pathology · Gastrointestinal disorders and treatments · Abdominal Surgery and Complications
