RECTUS SHEATH HEMATOMA - DIAGNOSIS BY COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY SCANNING
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 56 (12) , 757-761
Abstract
A 65-yr-old woman receiving long-term oral anticoagulant therapy was admitted with signs and symptoms suggesting colonic obstruction. A tender, firm left lower-quadrant mass, colonic and small bowel distention, mild leukocytosis and a markedly elevated prothrombin time were the prominent presenting abnormalities. Emergency colon x-ray study did not demonstrate colonic obstruction and ultrasound of the abdomen was initially nondiagnostic. Computed tomography scanning revealed a large mass localized to the left rectus sheath and muscle consistent, in this clinical setting, with a spontaneous rectus sheath hematoma. The usefulness of computed tomography scanning in the evaluation of indeterminate abdominal masses such as the rectus sheath hematoma, is suggested. The subject of rectus sheath hematoma is reviewed to emphasize its inclusion in the differential diagnosis of the acute abdomen and to suggest an earlier, more accurate and noninvasive approach to its diagnosis.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Echographic detection and characterization of abdominal hemorrhages in patients with altered coagulation statesArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1978