Spontaneous intramural small bowel hematoma: unusual cause of intestinal subocclusion in an anticoagulated patient-a case report
Research article published in AME case reports (2026)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spontaneous intramural small bowel hematoma (SISBH) is a rare complication of long-term oral anticoagulation, particularly with vitamin K antagonists (VKAs). SISBH diagnosis is based on oral anticoagulation history associated with acute abdominal symptoms and suggestive radiological findings. Experience with this condition is still limited in the literature. This report highlights the clinical presentation and management of this rare condition, including the first known use of total-body positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) scan in the diagnostic workup of SISBH. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 53-year-old male on long-term oral anticoagulation with VKA for mechanical mitral valve replacement due to rheumatic heart disease presented to the emergency department for abdominal pain and nausea. Physical examination was remarkable for abdominal distension, increased bowel sounds and rebound tenderness, a presentation compatible with intestinal subocclusion. At admission, the international normalized ratio was 8.3, indicating VKA intoxication. Abdominal CT revealed significant jejunal parietal thickening, suggestive of SISBH. PET/CT findings were also consistent with a possible hematoma, although an inflammatory or neoplastic process could not be excluded. We opted for conservative treatment with temporary warfarin suspension and vitamin K infusion. The patient's intestinal subocclusion gradually improved, and he was discharged after seven days with full recovery. CONCLUSIONS: SISBH, although rare, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute abdominal symptoms in patients receiving long-term oral anticoagulation, particularly with VKAs. Conservative treatment is the preferred initial option. A high index of suspicion, followed by prompt abdominal CT, is key to early diagnosis. PET/CT provided minimal diagnostic value beyond CT. Conservative management with anticoagulation reversal and supportive care is generally the primary therapeutic strategy adopted in the literature, demonstrating favorable short-term outcomes, as was the case with our patient.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
This single case report describes a 53-year-old man on long-term vitamin K antagonist anticoagulation (for a mechanical mitral valve) who presented with intestinal subocclusion from a spontaneous intramural small-bowel hematoma at a markedly supratherapeutic INR of 8.3, managed conservatively with warfarin suspension and vitamin K reversal to full recovery. For ASH it is a sober illustration of the bleeding hazard that defines the entire anticoagulation landscape in which medicinal leech therapy operates: leech saliva delivers its own anticoagulant load (hirudin and related antithrombotics), so the case is a reminder that any anticoagulant effect must be weighed against hemorrhagic risk, and that patients already systemically anticoagulated are a population where adding a bleeding source warrants caution. The caveat is fundamental: this is a single, uncontrolled case report about a VKA complication with no leech involvement whatsoever, so it carries no generalizable evidence and only contextualizes anticoagulation-bleeding tradeoffs rather than informing hirudotherapy practice directly.
Citation
Spontaneous intramural small bowel hematoma: unusual cause of intestinal subocclusion in an anticoagulated patient-a case report.
Calomeni et al. · AME case reports, 2026
Added to ASH library: May 28, 2026 · Site last updated: June 18, 2026