Vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (vEDS) is a rare autosomal dominant connective tissue disease. Patients with vEDS are at a high risk of developing severe complications (such as arterial aneurysm, arterial rupture, intestinal rupture) at an early age. We report a case of colonic perforation in a vEDS patient with no family history of that disease. A 28-year-old man with abdominal pain arrived at our hospital in an ambulance. The preoperative diagnosis was panperitonitis due to gastrointestinal perforation. Although his parents had not suffered from vEDS, he had been diagnosed with the disease at 25 years of age because of his history of arterial dissection. We performed an emergency operation using Hartmann's procedure to construct a descending colostomy. There remains a lack of consensus on surgical management in vEDS patients with gastrointestinal perforation because of the limited number of reported cases.
Immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4)-related disease (IgG4-RD) is a recently characterized entity in which lymphocytes and plasma cells infiltrate various anatomical sites. IgG4-hepatopathy, which is the manifestation of IgG4-RD, is a broader term covering various patterns of liver injury. The clinical course including the malignant potential of IgG4-RD remains unclear. Here we report the first case of secondary hemochromatosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) developed from IgG4hepatopathy. A 67-year-old man was admitted to our hospital due to deteriorated glucose tolerance.Blood test results showed hypergammaglobulinemia, especially IgG4. He was readmitted 2 months later with dyspnea due to lung disease and pleural effusion, with elevated transaminase levels. He underwent liver and lung biopsies and was diagnosed with IgG4-RD, and received steroid therapy, which improved his serum IgG4 levels and imaging abnormalities. A follow-up computed tomography (CT) scan conducted 38 months later demonstrated a 50-mm-diameter tumor segments 7 and 8 of the liver. The resected specimen revealed HCC and abundant siderosis in the background liver, leading to a diagnosis of hemochromatosis. IgG4-positive cells were scarce, probably due to corticosteroid therapy. In the present case, IgG4-RD was well controlled with prednisolone (PSL) and immunosuppressive agent, and chronic hepatitis was not so severe, even though the patient subsequently developed HCC. However, extensive siderosis consistent with hemochromatosis was unexpectedly noted. It is suggested that secondary hemochromatosis and HCC developed during IgG4-RD with hepatopathy. Here we report the present case because it contributes to our understanding of IgG4-RD.
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