Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia diagnosed by double-balloon enteroscopy and treated by medium-chain triglycerides: a case report.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the diagnostic approach and therapeutic efficacy of a low-fat and medium-chain triglyceride diet in treating primary intestinal lymphangiectasia.
Results Summary
The study found that a low-fat and medium-chain triglyceride diet, following initial total parenteral nutrition, completely relieved symptoms in a patient with protein-losing enteropathy caused by intestinal lymphangiectasia. The diagnosis was confirmed via double-balloon enteroscopy and biopsy.
Population
A 17-year-old girl of Mongoloid ethnicity with primary intestinal lymphangiectasia.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
double-balloon enteroscopy and biopsy | no change | diagnosis of intestinal lymphangiectasia | - | - | can be used to confirm the diagnosis | #1 |
pathology | no change | diagnosis of intestinal lymphangiectasia | - | - | can be used to confirm the diagnosis | #2 |
polymeric diet containing medium-chain triglycerides | no change | intestinal lymphangiectasia | - | - | may be a useful therapy | #3 |
total parenteral nutrition | no change | intestinal lymphangiectasia | - | - | may be a useful therapy | #4 |
total parenteral nutrition | decrease | symptoms | 17-year-old girl of Mongoloid ethnicity with protein-losing enteropathy caused by intestinal lymphangiectasia | totally relieved | followed by | #5 |
low-fat and medium-chain triglyceride diet | decrease | symptoms | 17-year-old girl of Mongoloid ethnicity with protein-losing enteropathy caused by intestinal lymphangiectasia | totally relieved | followed by | #6 |
double-balloon enteroscopy and multi-dot biopsy | no change | intestinal lymphangiectasia | - | - | can be diagnosed with | #7 |
pathology of small intestinal tissue showing edema of the submucosa and lymphangiectasia | no change | intestinal lymphangiectasia | - | - | can be diagnosed with | #8 |
low-fat and medium-chain triglyceride diet | no change | diagnosis of primary intestinal lymphangiectasia | - | can further confirm | positive clinical response to | #9 |
INTRODUCTION: Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia is a disorder characterized by exudative enteropathy resulting from morphologic abnormalities of the intestinal lymphatics. Intestinal lymphangiectasia can be primary or secondary, so the diagnosis of primary intestinal lymphangiectasia must first exclude the possibility of secondary intestinal lymphangiectasia. A double-balloon enteroscopy and biopsy, as well as the pathology can be used to confirm the diagnosis of intestinal lymphangiectasia. A polymeric diet containing medium-chain triglycerides and total parenteral nutrition may be a useful therapy. CASE PRESENTATION: A 17-year-old girl of Mongoloid ethnicity was admitted to our hospital with a history of diarrhea and edema. She was diagnosed with protein-losing enteropathy caused by intestinal lymphangiectasia. This was confirmed by a double-balloon enteroscopy and multi-dot biopsy. After treatment with total parenteral nutrition in hospital, which was followed by a low-fat and medium-chain triglyceride diet at home, she was totally relieved of her symptoms. CONCLUSION: Intestinal lymphangiectasia can be diagnosed with a double-balloon enteroscopy and multi-dot biopsy, as well as the pathology of small intestinal tissue showing edema of the submucosa and lymphangiectasia. Because intestinal lymphangiectasia can be primary or secondary, the diagnosis of primary intestinal lymphangiectasia must first exclude the possibility of secondary intestinal lymphangiectasia. A positive clinical response to the special diet therapy, namely a low-fat and medium-chain triglyceride diet, can further confirm the diagnosis of primary intestinal lymphangiectasia.