Introduction and importance
Textiloma is a retained surgical item such as a sponge or gauze that is unintentionally left in the surgical field after the wound closure. Here, we present the first reported surgical gauze that penetrated the intestine, made a duodenal-ceca fistula and then stuck far away in the ileum. Mechanical obstruction didn't appear clinically or even in radiological investigations because of the fistula which provided the intestinal continuity.
Case presentation
We report a 34-year-old man with a previous abdominal interventions complained of cramping, frequent vomiting and presence of undigested food in stool. The frequency of the bowel movement increased recently. Endoscopies, radiological investigations and pathological findings figure out a duodenal-ceca fistula with nonspecific inflammatory tissues in the intestinal biopsy. When we performed the abdomen surgery, retained gauze in the ileum was taken out and the duodenal-ceca fistula was fixed.
Clinical discussion
Gauze or sponge that is forgotten in the surgical field called gossypiboma, textiloma, gauzoma or cottonoid. It could present with various complaints; as an acute or chronic problem, clear or ambiguous symptoms. It could reside in a space; extend across a gap, migrate through a tissue, or even make a fistula between lumina like in our case.
Conclusion
Textiloma could change pre-operative diagnosis, intra-operative techniques, postoperative follow-up plan and prognosis. This is the first report proves its ability to mimic inflammatory diseases that penetrate two different lumina and perform fistula. So it should be written in the list of any differential diagnosis when the patient has a previous procedure or surgery.
Highlights
Possibility of laparoscopic approach should be studied in every hydatid cyst case.
Simultaneous laparoscopic procedure doesn’t increase rate of complications.
Skills and instruments should be improved continuously.
This improvement perform safely more complicated laparoscopic procedures.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.