CC BY 4.0 · Journal of Digestive Endoscopy
DOI: 10.1055/s-0045-1804520
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Clip-and-Let-Go Rescuing Loop-and-Let-Go Technique in Endoscopic Duodenal Lipoma Treatment

1   Department of Medicine, Knappschaftsklinikum Saar GmbH, Püttlingen, Germany
2   Department of Medicine II, Saarland University Medical Center, Saarland University, Homburg, Germany
› Institutsangaben
Funding None.
 

An 82-year-old female patient was referred for consideration of endoscopic treatment of an estimated 30-mm subepithelial lesion in the descending duodenum presumed to represent a lipoma. Epigastric discomfort did not benefit from proton pump inhibition and other medications under the assumption of functional dyspepsia. The patient finally consented to endoscopic treatment with a loop-and-let-go technique devised for this benign condition with a questionable symptom correlation. Endoscopy recapitulated a soft elongated lesion with yellowish appearance with a naked fat sign after forceps biopsy at the tip ([Fig. 1A]). Endoloop placement at the base was uncomplicated; however, loop dysfunction resulted in circumferential avulsion of mucosal covering, leaving behind a central stalk with feeding vessels ([Fig. 1B]). Rescue clipping of the lesion was intended using two 16-mm clips as indicated by figures, providing the stalk and the mucosal defect, respectively. This was accomplished without difficulty ([Fig. 1C]) with repeat endoscopy the following day indicating complete necrosis of the lesion ([Fig. 1D]). While the further clinical course was uncomplicated, providing minor symptomatic improvement, final endoscopic assessment after 3 weeks demonstrated complete eradication and healing with one clip still in situ ([Fig. 1E]).

Zoom Image
Fig. 1 (A) Estimated 3-cm, finger-like duodenal lipoma with the naked fat sign exposed at the tip after forceps manipulation. (B) Mucosal detachment with the vessel pedicle and lipoma tissue exposed after endoloop misdeployment. (1, 2: intended clip positioning to rescue failure in the loop-and-let-go technique). (C) Two hemoclips applied at pedicle to induce tissue necrosis (clip-and-let-go bailout) and at mucosal tear. (D) Complete lipoma necrosis at day 1. (E) Final result with complete lipoma eradication at day 21.

This is the first description of a clip-and-let-go as an endoscopic bailout for failure of the loop-and-let-go concept due to ligation misdeployment for a small-based lipoma.[1]


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Conflict of Interest

None declared.

  • Reference

  • 1 Veloso R, Pinho R, Rodrigues A. et al. Endoloop ligation (“loop-and-let-go”) of a large ileal lipoma by balloon-assisted enteroscopy. Endoscopy 2012; 44 (2, Suppl 2 UCTN): E176

Address for correspondence

Vincent Zimmer, MD
Department of Medicine II, Saarland University Medical Center
Kirrberger Str. 100, 66421 Homburg
Germany   

Publikationsverlauf

Artikel online veröffentlicht:
17. März 2025

© 2025. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

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  • Reference

  • 1 Veloso R, Pinho R, Rodrigues A. et al. Endoloop ligation (“loop-and-let-go”) of a large ileal lipoma by balloon-assisted enteroscopy. Endoscopy 2012; 44 (2, Suppl 2 UCTN): E176

Zoom Image
Fig. 1 (A) Estimated 3-cm, finger-like duodenal lipoma with the naked fat sign exposed at the tip after forceps manipulation. (B) Mucosal detachment with the vessel pedicle and lipoma tissue exposed after endoloop misdeployment. (1, 2: intended clip positioning to rescue failure in the loop-and-let-go technique). (C) Two hemoclips applied at pedicle to induce tissue necrosis (clip-and-let-go bailout) and at mucosal tear. (D) Complete lipoma necrosis at day 1. (E) Final result with complete lipoma eradication at day 21.