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Clinical Gastroenterology 2016

October 03-05, 2016

Volume 6, Issue 6(Suppl)

J Gastrointest Dig Syst

ISSN:2161-069X JGDS, an open access journal

conferenceseries

.com

October 03-05, 2016 Toronto, Canada

8

th

International Conference on

Clinical Gastroenterology & Hepatology

Endoscopic evaluation of upper gastrointestinal in Iranian patients with familial adenomatous

polyposis

Reza Fatemi

Shahid Beheshti University, Iran

Background & Aim:

Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is an autosomal dominant disease which is characterized by over

100 adenomatous polyps in colon and rectum. The prevalence of gastroduodenal polyps in FAP patients and the progression

of the polyps to cancer (especially, those in the papilla of duodenum) seem to be higher than general population. In this study

the prevalence of gastroduodenal polyps in Iranian FAP patients has been evaluated.

Methods:

28 patients affected by FAP (from 23 families) were invited to undergo front-view and side-view endoscopy (the

diagnosis of FAP was based on the presence of multiple adenomatous polyps in colon and rectum and APC gene study).

Papillary biopsies were performed in all patients (with normal or 2 abnormal appearance). Finally the results of upper GI

endoscopy procedure including: location of polyps, number and size of polyps, and the polyps of periampullary area and

pathology study, in addition to patient general information (based on gender, age, age of patients at the time of diagnosis of

FAP, family history of FAP or colorectal cancer and gastroduodenal polyps) were analyzed.

Results:

28 patients affected by FAP (10 females and 18 males) with an average age of 38 year old, participated in this study.

The outcomes were as follows: Gastric polyp in 39.28 % of patients (11 patients), was seen. (72.7% of patients with gastric

polyps had fundic gland polyp and 36.36% had hyperplastic polyp); Duodenal adenoma in 25% of patients (7 patients) was

seen. (57.13%: tubular adenoma with low grade dysplasia, 42.8% tubulovillous adenoma with low grade dysplasia); Normal

endoscopy (no polyp was seen in endoscopy); 39.28% (11 patients) one patient (3.56%) had both gastric and duodenal polyps

at the same time. There was no patient with duodenal or gastric cancer. Only one 22 year patient had a polyp in the papilla of

duodenum that it was in stage one of spigelman stage classification. Desmoid tumor was seen in one 36 year female patient,

(3.56%) in the left ureter and forehead. she had no significant upper GI complaint, but there was one small sessile polyp in D2

(Tubuvillous adenoma with low grade dysplasia).

Conclusion:

The prevalence of gastroduodenal polyps in Iranian FAP patients is high and dysplasia has been seen in duodenal

polyps of these patients.

dr.nedafat20@yahoo.com

J Gastrointest Dig Syst 2016, 6:6(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2161-069X.C1.041

Hemangiopericytoma of the greater omentum with pelvic metastasis: A very rare occurrence; case

report

Shemssie Shewmollo Bushira

Saint Paul’s Teaching Referral Hospital, Ethiopia

H

emangiopericytoma arising from the greater omentum is very rare, and only few case reports were found in the English

literature. Here we report a case of hemangiopericytoma arising from the greater omentum with pelvic metastasis.

The case was a 45 year old male patient admitted at our hospital with abdominal pain and swelling. Abdominal ultrasound

and computer tomography detected a huge heterogeneously enhancing predominantly solid central abdominal mass with

cystic changes. Laparotomy and excision of huge freely mobile highly vascularized mass arising from the greater omentum

and multiple deposits on the anterior wall of the rectum was performed. Histological findings confirmed a diagnosis of

hemangiopericytoma of the greater omentum with secondary deposits in the pelvis.

shemssie@yahoo.com