Abstract

Angiodysplasia is an often unrecognized cause of upper-gastrointestinal bleeding, most commonly found in the antrum of the stomach but also in the duodenum and rarely in the esophagus. Small-intestinal angiodysplasia is the source of gastrointestinal bleeding of obscure origin in 30-40% of cases. The diagnosis is usually made by esophagogastroduodenoscopy, push enteroscopy, or selective angiography. We report the first case of angiodysplasia of the minor papilla diagnosed by side-viewing duodenoscopy.

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