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. 1978 Sep 9;2(6139):751–754. doi: 10.1136/bmj.2.6139.751

Diagnosis and management of obscure gastrointestinal bleeding.

D Tarin, D J Allison, I M Modlin, G Neale
PMCID: PMC1607610  PMID: 308828

Abstract

Twelve consecutive patients presenting with unexplained recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding were investigated by selective visceral angiography. A cause for the bleeding was shown in all 12 cases, and in eight the lesion responsible was diagnosed radiologically as an area of angiodysplasia. Abnormal areas were pinpointed by fluoroscopy and examination of the resected bowel with a dissecting microscope after injecting the vessels with barium. Histologically these areas had various microvascular abnormalities. Angiodysplasia is a useful descriptive radiological term, but does not seem to represent a single pathological entity.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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