Background: Due to the lack of symptoms an enterothorax frequently remains undetected in adults. Most symptomatic patients complain about bowel obstruction and a surgical repair of the diaphragmatic defect, particularly with a mesh, is mandatory.
Methods: This report presents the case of a 72-year-old female patient with a history of an upside-down stomach presenting with a painless jaundice and signs of liver cirrhosis.
Clinical course: The preoperative work-up revealed an enterothorax with compression of the main bile duct. Explorative laparotomy showed a liver cirrhosis with distinct intrahepatic cholestasis, a hydropic gallbladder and confirmed a right-sided diaphragmatic defect with an enterothorax. After reposition of the intestine, a cholecystectomy, bile duct revision and the closure of the diaphragmatic defect using a mesh were performed.
Conclusion: Diaphragmatic defects are the basis for the formation of an enterothorax which may be associated with a complicated clinical course. Therefore, in cases of coincidental diagnosis, even in asymptomatic patients, surgical repair should be performed in order to prevent serious complications as presented in this case.
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