A 55-year-old man with a remote history of appendectomy presented to the emergency
department 24 hours after undergoing a screening colonoscopy, complaining of persistent
nausea, emesis, and worsening abdominal pain that began during a split-day bowel preparation
with low-volume polyethylene glycol and bisacodyl tablets. The patient reported that
he developed nausea and generalized abdominal cramping after he finished the first
part of bowel preparation and then developed multiple episodes of emesis after the
second part. However, his vital signs and abdominal exam were unremarkable and colonoscopy
was performed without difficulty. At home he had recurrent nausea, emesis, and worsening
abdominal pain, and therefore went to the emergency department. His abdomen was distended,
tympanitic, and diffusely tender to palpation, with hypoactive, high-pitched bowel
sounds and no peritoneal signs. Plain radiographs of the abdomen revealed no free
air, but did indicate distension of the proximal and mid small bowel with multiple
air-fluid levels ([Fig. 1]).
Fig. 1 Plain abdominal radiograph (upright) demonstrating distension of proximal and mid
small bowel with multiple air-fluid levels.
After conservative management failed, the patient underwent a laparotomy which revealed
an obstruction in the ileum secondary to a stricture caused by an adhesion.
The most common cause of small-bowel obstruction (SBO) is adhesions (65 % – 75 % of
cases) [1]. The literature contains a few case reports of SBO secondary to colonoscopy [2]
[3]
[4]
[5]. Ours is the first report of a SBO induced by bowel preparation. Review of the cases
of colonoscopy-induced SBO, as well as of this present case, found that a common factor
was prior abdominal surgery. The fact that symptoms of SBO started almost immediately
after the patient’s bowel preparation was finished and before his arrival for the
colonoscopy makes it less likely that the procedure itself induced SBO. The rare complication
of SBO should be considered in a patient presenting with symptoms of nausea, vomiting,
and abdominal pain at the time of colonoscopy.
Competing interests: None
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_CPL_1AJ_2AB