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. 2016 Feb 8;8(4):231–262. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v8.i4.231

Figure 2.

Figure 2

A 60-year-old man presented for routine endoscopic screening for esophageal varices due to a history of Child-Pugh class B cirrhosis, with a model for end-stage liver disease score = 18, from hepatitis C secondary to former intravenous drug use. The patient denied a history of gastrointestinal bleeding. The hematocrit was 40.1%. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealed the classic findings of portal hypertensive gastropathy, including a pale white reticular (mosaic) pattern surrounding small polygonal areas of mucosa, with variable erythema, in the entire stomach, but most prominently in the gastric fundus and body. B is a relatively close-up view of the lesions seen in A.