Abdominal organ injury in a primary blast type is always challenging for diagnosis. Air containing abdominal viscera is most vulnerable to effects of primary blast injury. In any patient exposed to a ...primary blast wave who presents with an acute abdomen, an abdominal organ injury is to be kept in a clinical suspicion.
Study various abdominal organ injuries occurring in a primary type of blast injury.
All those who had exploratory laparotomy for abdominal organ injuries after a primary blast injury for a period of 10 years from January 1998 - January 2008 were included in this retrospective study.
Total 154 patients had laparotomy for abdominal organ injuries with a primary blast type of injury. Small intestine was damaged in 48 patients (31.1%) followed by spleen in 22.7% cases. 54 patients (35.06%) had more than one organ injured. Liver laceration was present in 30 patients (19.48%). Multiple small gut perforations were present in 37 patients (77.08%). Negative laparotomy was found in 5 patients (3.24%) whereas 3 (1.94%) had re-exploration. Mortality was present in 6 patients (3.89%).
Primary blast injury causes varied abdominal organ injuries. Single or multiple organ damage can be there. Small intestine is commonest viscera injured. Laparotomy gives final diagnosis.
Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent in Indian Kashmir. Many people get injectable vitamin D (600,000 IU/injection). At times, the dose prescribed is far above the permissible limit. We report 62 ...patients with malpractice-related vitamin D intoxication, presenting with hypercalcemia and acute kidney injury (AKI).
The diagnosis was made on basis of (1) history of multiple intramuscular vitamin D injections (2) toxic serum levels of 25-OH vitamin D and (3) exclusion of common causes of hypercalcemia (malignancy and hyperparathyroidism). Their presentation was either de novo AKI in 51 (group 1) or acute on top of chronic kidney disease in 11 (group 2).
The mean age was 60 ± 14 vs. 62 ± 13 years, approximate number of vitamin D injections received ranged from 4 to 28 (2.4 - 16.8 million units) vs. 3 to 24 (1.8 - 14.4 million units), mean creatinine at presentation was 3.2 ± 0.9 vs. 4.5 ± 1.1 mg/dL, which decreased to 1.2 ± 0.2 vs. 3.3 ± 1.0 mg/dL, mean serum calcium on admission was 13.7 ± 1.4 vs. 13.6 ± 2.0 mg/dL which decreased to 10.7 ± 1.2 vs. 11.0 ± 1.0 mg/dL on follow-up of 7.2 ± 0.6 months, mean vitamin D level was 313.3 ± 54.8 (range 235 - 375) vs. 303.7 ± 48.4 (range 210 - 375) nmol/L and mean PTH was 18.1 ± 9.6 (range 6.2 - 32) vs. 52.3 ± 12.6 (range 28 - 88) pg/mL in group 1 vs. group 2, respectively. The clinical presentation was weakness, constipation, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, altered sensorium, and oliguria. The treatment received was intravenous fluids (normal saline) in all in group 1 and in 8/11 in group 2, short course of steroids (prednisolone) in 44, and bisphosphonate in 6.
This is the largest case series of AKI secondary to vitamin D toxicity ever reported. .
Hydatid disease in the muscles progresses slowly and is rarely life-threatening. Because of location, hydatid of psoas muscle usually remains asymptomatic and is found incidentally or an enlarging ...cyst can compress adjacent structures; kidney leading to its nonfunctioning, ureter, or the vertebrae.
Gallbladder ascariasis Wani, Imtiaz
The Turkish journal of gastroenterology : the official journal of Turkish Society of Gastroenterology,
04/2011, Volume:
22, Issue:
2
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Gallbladder ascariasis is rarely encountered. The causative agent is Ascaris lumbricoides. Presence of ascaris inside the gallbladder can incite acalculous cholecystitis. We aimed in this report to ...study gallbladder ascariasis.
This is a case study of 28 patients with a diagnosis of gallbladder ascariasis from 2005 to 2010 who were seen in the Department of General Surgery, SMHS Hospital.
Three patients with gallbladder ascariasis had associated worms in the common bile duct. On abdominal sonography, all patients showed worms as linear echogenic shadows or the worms showed 'belly dance' of worms when actively moving. Acute acalculous cholecystitis was present in 21 patients, and 7 had biliary colic. Dead worms in the gallbladder were seen in 4 patients, of which, one was fragmented and another had calcified form of parasite. Twenty-two patients had spontaneous exit of worms from the gallbladder with a time interval ranging from 1 hour to 144 hours from the time of a diagnosis. Six patients had cholecystectomy. Two patients were subjected to emergency cholecystectomy due to multiple impacted worms not exiting from the gallbladder after conservative treatment.
Based on our experience, ultrasound diagnosis is advocated as a highly sensitive and noninvasive technique for suspected gallbladder ascariasis and it can be repeated frequently to monitor movement of worms in the gallbladder and common bile ducts.
Appendiceal ascariasis in children Wani, Imtiaz; Maqbool, Muddasir; Amin, Abid ...
Annals of Saudi medicine,
2010 Jan-Feb, 2010-01-00, 20100101, 2010-01-01, Volume:
30, Issue:
1
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Open access
The propensity of Ascaris lumbricoides to wander leads to varied surgical complications in the abdomen. Wandering A lumbricoides may sometimes reach the vermiform appendix and its presence there may ...remain silent or incite pathology. Our aim was to study ascariadial appendicitis.
Over a period of 3 years, we identified children who were found to have appendiceal ascariasis during surgery for different intestinal complications due to ascariasis. We studied the relationship between ascariasis and its lodgement inside the vermiform appendix in these patients. No preoperative diagnosis was made in this series.
We found 11 patients with appendiceal ascariasis. It was incidentally found that 8/11 (72.7%) patients had worms inside their vermiform appendix but not appendicitis, whereas the remaining three patients (27.2%) were found to have Ascaris-associated appendicitis. The characteristic finding in Ascaris-infested vermiform appendix was that the worm is positioned with its head at the base and its tail at the tip of the appendix.
Migration of A lumbrocoides inside the vermiform appendix is an incidental finding and tends to pursue a silent course in most patients. Only rarely does the presence of Ascaris inside the vermiform appendix cause appendicitis.
Adhesive small bowel obstruction (ASBO) is a common surgical emergency, causing high morbidity and even some mortality. The adhesions causing such bowel obstructions are typically the footprints of ...previous abdominal surgical procedures. The present paper presents a revised version of the Bologna guidelines to evidence-based diagnosis and treatment of ASBO. The working group has added paragraphs on prevention of ASBO and special patient groups.
The guideline was written under the auspices of the World Society of Emergency Surgery by the ASBO working group. A systematic literature search was performed prior to the update of the guidelines to identify relevant new papers on epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment of ASBO. Literature was critically appraised according to an evidence-based guideline development method. Final recommendations were approved by the workgroup, taking into account the level of evidence of the conclusion.
Adhesion formation might be reduced by minimally invasive surgical techniques and the use of adhesion barriers. Non-operative treatment is effective in most patients with ASBO. Contraindications for non-operative treatment include peritonitis, strangulation, and ischemia. When the adhesive etiology of obstruction is unsure, or when contraindications for non-operative management might be present, CT is the diagnostic technique of choice. The principles of non-operative treatment are
per os, naso-gastric, or long-tube decompression, and intravenous supplementation with fluids and electrolytes. When operative treatment is required, a laparoscopic approach may be beneficial for selected cases of simple ASBO.Younger patients have a higher lifetime risk for recurrent ASBO and might therefore benefit from application of adhesion barriers as both primary and secondary prevention.
This guideline presents recommendations that can be used by surgeons who treat patients with ASBO. Scientific evidence for some aspects of ASBO management is scarce, in particular aspects relating to special patient groups. Results of a randomized trial of laparoscopic versus open surgery for ASBO are awaited.
Meckel's diverticulum is the most common congenital anomaly of the gastrointestinal tract. In children with intestinal ascariasis, the diverticulum remains asymptomatic or rarely the Ascaris ...lumbricoides may lead to its complications in the presence of massive intestinal roundworm load. Given that preoperative diagnosis is seldom carried out, when Meckel's diverticulum is found at laparotomy for obstructive intestinal complications of roundworm, the diverticulum should be removed as complications may occur at any time. The aim of this study was to describe the findings of concomitant presence of Meckel's diverticulum who had surgical intervention in symptomatic intestinal ascariasis in children.
A retrospective case review study of 14 children who had surgical intervention for symptomatic intestinal ascariasis having the presence of concomitant Meckel's diverticulum was done. The study was done at SMHS Hospital Srinagar, Kashmir.
A total of the 14 children who had ascaridial intestinal obstruction with concomitant presence of Meckel's diverticulum were studied. Age of children ranged from 4-12 years, male:female ratio was 1.8:1. Nine patients had asymptomatic Meckel's diverticulum, whereas 5 patients with symptomatic signs were found in the course of emergency surgery for ascaridial intestinal obstruction.
Meckel's diverticulum in intestinal ascariasis may pursue silent course or may be accompanied with complications of the diverticulitis, perforation or the gangrene. Incidental finding of the Meckel's diverticulum in the intestinal ascariasis should have removal.