A two-year-old girl with two weeks of abdominal pain, vomiting, and food refusal, ten months after percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy insertion because of inadequate peroral intake, was admitted to a tertiary centre hospital. On admission, the extracorporeal part of the gastrostomy was much shortened.
X-ray examination revealed migration of the end of the gastrostomy tube with a left-shifted course of the tube through the duodenum. Gastroscopy and subsequently laparotomy were performed.
A longitudinal pressure necrosis was identified under the tube, with two perforations in the duodenojejunal region. Ten centimeters of that duodenojejunal region were resected, and end-to-end anastomosis was made.
The migration of the gastrostomy was probably caused by insufficient care by the parents. Pathophysiologically, the tube caused the pressure necrosis in the duodenojenunal area; this was supported by histology.
This is a hitherto undescribed complication of a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy, showing that migration of the gastrostomy to the deeper part of the small bowel can lead to pressure necrosis, a potentially life-threatening condition in children which cannot be treated without invasive procedures.