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Article
Incidental Hepatic Granulomata as the Initial Presentation of Crohn's Disease in a Pediatric Patient
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  • Mojdeh Mostafavi, MD, Baystate Health
  • Wael Sayej, MD, Baystate Health
  • Blake Hansen, MD, Baystate Health
  • Anthony Cretara, MD, Baystate Health
  • James Mueller, MD, Baystate Health
  • Barry Hirsch, MD, Baystate Health
Document Type
Article, Peer-reviewed
Publication Date
10-1-2021
Abstract

We describe a 9-year-old girl who presented with abdominal pain, found incidentally to have multiple liver granulomata. Extensive autoimmune and infectious workup was negative. The patient had esophagogastroduodenoscopy and colonoscopy, confirming the diagnosis of Crohn's disease. Hepatic granulomata are a rare complication of Crohn's disease and are often secondary to pharmacotherapy or infection in immunosuppressed patients. This case, to our knowledge, is the first reported case of a pediatric patient diagnosed with Crohn's disease after initially presenting with hepatic granulomata as an extraintestinal manifestation of the disease.

PMID
34621908
Citation Information
Mostafavi M, Sayej W, Hansen B, Cretara A, Mueller J, Hirsch B. Incidental Hepatic Granulomata as the Initial Presentation of Crohn's Disease in a Pediatric Patient. ACG Case Rep J. 2021 Oct 4;8(9):e00662. doi: 10.14309/crj.0000000000000662.