Monday Poster Session
Category: Colon

Ryan F. Hughes, MD
NewYork-Presbyterian / Weill Cornell Medical Center
New York, NY
Idiopathic myointimal hyperplasia of the mesenteric veins (IMHMV) is an exceedingly rare non-thrombotic, non-inflammatory cause of ischemic colitis, characterized by luminal obliteration of medium to large-sized mesenteric veins by proliferating smooth muscle cells and myofibroblasts embedded in a myxoid matrix, that is often clinically misdiagnosed as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) or infectious colitis. It is typically diagnosed following surgical resection via full-thickness histology, and as a result is often a delayed diagnosis, generally preceded by prolonged hospitalization and failed medical therapies. This case represents a rare instance in which the histologic diagnosis of IMHMV was made preoperatively.
IMHMV may be confounded by or mistaken for infections like C. difficile and may clinically mimic IBD. Surgical resection is curative, however delays to surgery of up to 6 months or longer have been reported. Early preoperative diagnosis of IMHMV may reduce unnecessary therapies and decrease time to surgery as definitive treatment.

