2000 Volume 39 Issue 11 Pages 994-998
A 70-year-old woman with fever was admitted to our hospital. She was diagnosed as miliary tuberculosis and treated with antituberculous drugs. After seven weeks of therapy, she developed a sudden sharp upper abdominal pain and shock. Angiography of the celiac artery showed two hepatic artery pseudoaneurysms with extravasation. The hemorrhage was successfully stopped by microcoil emboli/ation. The clinical course suggested that miliary tuberculosis had caused the pseudoaneurysms. Although aneurysms rarely occur as a complication of miliary tuberculosis, they should be diagnosed as early as possible because of the high rate of rupture and associated high mortality rate.
(Internal Medicine 39: 994-998, 2000)