A rare cause of acute abdominal pain

Submitted: 31 July 2017
Accepted: 13 October 2017
Published: 7 November 2017
Abstract Views: 1329
PDF: 471
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Acute abdominal pain represents a challenge for the physician because it can hide a serious intra-abdominal pathology necessitating emergency intervention. A 65-year-old man presented to Emergency Department with sudden-onset abdominal pain. He underwent liver transplantation four years before. He complained tenderness on abdominal palpation. Blood chemistry and abdominal x-ray were normal. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography showed acute renal artery thrombosis. The patient underwent renal arterial thrombectomy and stent placement in less than two hours. Organ transplantation is a condition that makes patients at greater risk of life-threatening conditions. Renal artery thrombosis is a rare, severe and misdiagnosed condition which can benefit from a prompt cooperation among emergency physician, surgeon, and interventional radiologist. Transplant patients with acute abdominal pain should be considered at high risk of medical emergency. Acute renal artery thrombosis is a time dependent medical emergency in those patients with chronic drug-induced nephrotoxicity.

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Bozzano, V., Aseni, P., Di Domenico, S., Colombo, R., Corciulo, M., & Bellone, A. (2017). A rare cause of acute abdominal pain. Emergency Care Journal, 13(2). https://doi.org/10.4081/ecj.2017.6966