Shafii, Alexis E.Agle, Steven C.Zervos, Emmanuel E.2011-04-282011-05-172011-04-282011-05-172009-05-07Journal of Medical Case Reports; 3:6507 p. 1-3http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3399Introduction: Patients with paraesophageal hernias often present secondary to chronic symptomatology. Infrequently, acute intestinal ischemia and perforation can occur as a consequence of paraesophageal hernias with potentially dire consequences. Case presentation: An 86-year-old obtunded male presented to the emergency department with hypotension and severe back and abdominal pain. An emergency abdominal CT scan was ordered with a presumptive diagnosis of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. CT topograms revealed extensive free intra-abdominal air and herniated abdominal viscera into the right hemithorax. Prior to completion of the CT study, the patient sustained a cardiopulmonary arrest. Surgery was consulted, but the patient was unable to be revived. Post-mortem examination revealed gross contamination within the abdomen and a giant, incarcerated, hiatal hernia with organoaxial volvulus and ischemic perforation. Conclusion: Current recommendations call for prompt repair of giant hiatal hernias before they become symptomatic due to the increased risk of strangulation. Torsion of the stomach in large hiatal hernias frequently leads to a fatal complication such as this warranting elective repair as soon as possible. Originally published Journal of Medical Case Reports, Vol. 3, No. 6507, May 2009en-USAuthor notified of opt-out rights by Cammie Jennings prior to upload of this article.Paraesophageal herniaIntestinal ischemiaPerforated gastic corpusPerforated gastric corpus in a strangulated paraesophageal hernia: a case reportArticlePMC2726547