Abdominal pain is a common symptom during pregnancy, but bowel obstruction as the cause is a rare phenomenon. Moreover, intestinal volvulus is an even more unusual cause of obstruction during pregnancy and normally involves the sigmoid colon. We report a unique case of midgut volvulus in a pregnant patient entering her third trimester who presented to the hospital with abdominal pain. Our case demonstrates the safety of computed topography in pregnancy while restricting radiation dose and highlights the need to have a high index of suspicion for bowel obstruction when approaching a pregnant patient with abdominal pain.
Diseases known to affect both the heart and liver include a variety of infectious, autoimmune, and metabolic disorders, as well as toxins: most commonly alcohol. As damage to both the heart and liver progresses, transplantation is a reasonable therapeutic option. Heart failure patients with underlying congestive hepatopathy receiving cardiac transplant have demonstrated improved liver enzyme levels posttransplant. Patients with severe end-stage liver disease requiring a liver transplant must undergo careful preoperative evaluation as surgical stress exposes the myocardium to high levels of catecholamines. Clinicians must consider both cardiac and hepatic complications when evaluating heart failure, cirrhosis, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. In Part 2 of this review, we discuss new noninvasive techniques for assessing liver fibrosis in the preoperative stage. Both serum and radiologic studies, such as transient elastography, have begun to take the place of liver biopsy due to their decreased morbidity. Last, we explore the current research examining the benefit of combined heart-liver transplant, although more longitudinal outcome studies are needed.
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