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Endoscopic Removal of Bleeding Brunner Gland Adenoma
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1976
Year
Endoscopic RemovalBrunner Gland AdenomaMedicineMinimally Invasive Procedure36-Year-old ManHistopathologyGastroenterologyGynecologyPathologyVisceral SurgeryEndocrine SurgerySurgeryMajor HematemesisUpper Gastrointestinal SurgeryGi TechniqueInterventional EndoscopyEndoscopic ImagingEndoscopic Diagnosis
A 36-year-old man had a major hematemesis because of a Brunner gland adenoma in the postbulbar portion of the duodenum. Three months later, the adenoma was successfully removed electively via endoscopic polypectomy. This is the first patient reported, to our knowledge, to have this technique for a bleeding Brunner gland adenoma. Endoscopic surgery is a relatively new development, and the technique of polypectomy has been used primarily in the colon. Surgery via upper gastrointestinal endoscopy promises to be as useful, although a somewhat different set of precautions applies.