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In the stomach, neoplastic lesions often arise in the setting of precursor conditions such as gastritis, intestinal metaplasia, or adenomatous lesions. Biopsies may, therefore, underestimate disease severity or even miss the diagnosis (sampling error). Endomicroscopy is able to visualize typical features of such pathologies. It enables in vivo microscopy of gastritis with definition of enhanced vascularity and vascular leakage, but the typical cobblestone appearance of the gastric mucosa is preserved. The presence of intestinal metaplasia is confirmed by columnar absorptive cells with brush border and goblet cells within villiform foveolar epithelium. Gastric neoplasia is characterized by crowded glands with intraluminal folding and glandular budding and branching accompanied by increased density of dilated and distorted capillaries. Finally, in gastric cancer, gland and overall mucosal architecture is progressively lost. These features are shown side by side with white-light endoscopic findings. Endomicroscopy is used in such a setting to rapidly screen larger areas (optical biopsies) and subsequently target tissue sampling to areas with highly suspicious microscopic patterns. In experienced hands, it therefore constitutes an important part especially in the presence of neoplastic lesions within noncircumscript gastric premalignant conditions. This article is part of an expert video encyclopedia.
The author presents the case of a patient with severe bleeding from a duodenal ulcer that could not be controlled by endoscopic application of metal clips and injection of fibrin glue. Angiographic embolization with placement of coils into the feeding vessel stopped the bleeding. However, 3 days later, a fistula emerged from coil material penetrating into the dorsal duodenum and a peritoneal leakage developed. The fistula was completely closed by placing an over-the-scope clip on the enteral opening of the fistula. This article is part of an expert video encyclopedia.