Zeitschrift für Gastroenterologie
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Hepatic hydrothorax is a rare complication of portal hypertension secondary to liver cirrhosis affecting approximately 5-10% of cirrhotic patients with ascites. Hepatic hydrothorax results from an accumulation of fluid migrating through a diaphragmatic defect from the abdominal cavity into the pleural cavities. The effusion of hepatic hydrothorax is typically transudative whereas the effusion of spontaneous bacterial empyema (SBEM) is exudative. ⋯ These patients should be considered for transjugular intrahepatic portal systemic shunt (TIPS) placement which is the most effective option for refractory hepatic hydrothorax with response rates ranging up to 80% in most studies. Suitable patients with hepatic hydrothorax should be considered as candidates for liver transplantation. TIPS may help to bridge the time to liver transplantation.
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We report on a 25-year-old woman with long-standing Crohn's disease. Upon admittance to the emergency department, the patient complained of abdominal pain with increasing intensity over the last few days. ⋯ Surprisingly, abdominal ultrasound did not show the suspected complication of Crohn's disease, but rather an incarcerated abdominal wall hernia, which turned out to be a spigelian hernia upon surgical repair. This case stresses the importance of abdominal ultrasound to rule out other diagnoses in patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease in the emergency setting before starting a potentially dangerous treatment with high-dose steroids.