Since the introduction in 2001 of M2A video capsule imaging of the small bowel in
humans, this technique has been used increasingly in patients with disorders of the
small bowel. In particular the assessment of small obscure gastrointestinal bleeding
sources and the detection of shallow inflammatory lesions in the small bowel, have
been greatly facilitated by this novel imaging procedure. We report two cases of patients
with obscure gastrointestinal bleeding, in whom normal passage of the capsule through
the antroduodenal junction was inhibited. This was because of delayed gastric emptying
in both patients, which was presumably caused by functional impairment of pyloric
motility. To facilitate capsule transport into the small bowel, after swallowing the
capsule each patient underwent unsedated upper gastrointestinal endoscopy during which
the capsule was grasped with a polypectomy snare, directly transported through the
pylorus, and finally released upon arrival in the second portion of the duodenum.
Capsule recordings revealed the source of bleeding in both patients and their medical
or surgical treatment was subsequently escalated. Capsule imaging of the small bowel
facilitated by esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) is safe, and can be applied when patients
have functional disorders of pyloric motility.
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S. Hollerbach, M.D.
Klinik für Gastroenterologie · Allgemeines Krankenhaus Celle · Akademisches Lehrkrankenhaus
der Medizinischen Hochschule Hannover
Siemensplatz 4 · 29221 Celle · Germany
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eMail: gastroenterologie@akh-celle.de