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1.
J Cardiothorac Surg ; 18(1): 227, 2023 Jul 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37438756

RESUMO

PURPOSE: The study aimed to assess the magnitude, risk factors, and management outcome of patients with a bronchopleural fistula at multiple centres in Ethiopia. METHOD AND MATERIALS: A ten years (September 2012 - August 2021) institution-based multicenter retrospective cohort study was conducted from September 13 to September 30, 2021. we surveyed the cards of all patients having a diagnosis of bronchopleural fistula for the last 10 years. The document was reviewed using an extraction checklist. Descriptive statistics (mean, standard deviation, frequency, percentages) and crosstabulation were used to describe the outcome variable. RESULT: A total of 52(2%) patients were diagnosed to have bronchopleural fistula out of 2546 patients admitted to the cardiothoracic unit in three hospitals from September 2012 - August 2021 and 69% of study participants were male. The mean age of study participants was 33.42 years with SD = 12.5. Thirty-one (60%) of the cases spontaneously developed a bronchopleural fistula and 20 (38%) were post-surgical and 1(2%) was a post-traumatic fistula. Of the total of post-surgical bronchopleural fistula, 14 (26.9%) of them were lung resection, 4 (7.7%) were hydatid cystectomy and 1(1.9%) are decortications, and bullectomy respectively. of the total post-lung resection, 8 (57%) were pneumonectomies followed by 3 (21.5%) Lobectomy, 2 (14.5%) wedge resection and 1(7%) bilobectomy respectively. Fifty patients were managed surgically and two patients were managed conservatively. Bronchopleural fistula (BPF) was closed in 40 (85.4%) and there were two (3.9%) deaths, and the cause of death was sepsis secondary to pneumonia of the contralateral lung in one case. CONCLUSION: Having thoracic surgery is a risk factor for the development of bronchopleural fistula. Management of bronchopleural fistula needs to be individualized.


Assuntos
Brônquios , Doenças Pleurais , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto , Feminino , Prevalência , Etiópia/epidemiologia , Estudos Retrospectivos , Resultado do Tratamento , Doenças Pleurais/epidemiologia , Doenças Pleurais/etiologia , Doenças Pleurais/cirurgia
2.
Int J Surg Case Rep ; 85: 106256, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34343797

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Fecaloma is an accumulation of feces that has formed a mass and has failed to be expelled spontaneously. Because fecal matter is harder and firmer in the left side of colon, and the diameter of the bowel is smaller compared to the right, fecalomas mostly form in recto-sigmoid area. Small bowel fecaloma formation is an extremely rare condition. CASE PRESENTATION: We report a 49 years old man who presented with small bowel obstruction due to ileal fecalomas for whom enterotomy and removal of fecaloma was done with good outcome. DISCUSSION: Fecal matter can accumulate in the intestinal lumen to form a mass separate from other intestinal contents which eventually becomes fecaloma. Formation is usually related to chronic constipation, conditions causing intestinal motility disorder, or in psychiatric patients who could have ingested extraordinary substances. Fecaloma can present as abdominal mass, stercoral colitis, urinary retention or intestinal obstruction. Treatment options include conservative management with bowel rest, laxatives, endoscopic removal, laparotomy and removal via enterotomy. CONCLUSION: Fecaloma can be considered in patients who present with small bowel obstruction without any risk factors. Initial noninvasive management should be considered. Failed conservative treatment can be followed by laparotomy and fecaloma removal.

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