| 5. Acute Mesenteric Venous
Occlusion |
page 275 |
Ischemia of
mesenteric arterial origin is far more frequent than that of venous
disease. It is now recognized that many reported cases of mesenteric vein
thrombosis in actuality represented incorrectly diagnosed cases of
nonocclusive ischemia. The true incidence of mesenteric vein thrombosis is
quite low. Although the etiology of acute mesenteric vein thrombosis may
be idiopathic, the thrombosis is usually secondary to another disease
process. Conditions that predispose to mesenteric vein thrombosis are (1)
severe intra-abdominal sepsis, (2) hypercoagulable state (i.e.,
polycythemia vera) and (3) portal venous stasis (secondary to portal
hypertension associated with hepatic cirrhosis, or to extrinsic
compression of the venous system secondary to a tumor mass).
Thrombosis of the superior or inferior mesenteric vein
alone is usually not sufficient to produce intestinal ischemia. However,
acute thrombosis in a large mesenteric vein has the potential to cause
retrograde propagation of the clot up into the venous tributaries within
the bowel wall. This resultant venous occlusion within the bowel wall will
usually produce ischemia, possibly with infarction. In many cases of
venous intestinal ischemia the thrombosis does not begin in a large
mesenteric vein. In these situations it appears that the venous thrombosis
begins primarily in the small venous intramural tributaries. In either
case, if the venous thrombosis becomes extensive, arterial thrombosis may
follow, making it very difficult to determine the exact etiology of the
intestinal ischemia.
The clinical presentation of patients with venous
intestinal ischemia is often similar if not identical to that of patients
with acute mesenteric artery occlusion. Accordingly, the diagnosis is
often made only at the time of surgery or by the pathologist who examines
the resected specimen.
The treatment of this disease is generally surgical,
with the infarcted segment of intestine being resected. The surgeon should
be aware that the venous thrombosis may extend beyond the limits of the
gross infarction. Since any residual thrombosis has the potential to
propagate, the resection should include adjacent bowel and mesentery until
all grossly involved thrombosed veins are removed. It has been shown that
mortality from this disease can be reduced if patients are anticoagulated
as soon as possible after surgery. |