BackgroundSpontaneous colonic perforations are scarce, and cecal perforations even more so. Preoperative diagnosis of the latter in a pregnant woman is particularly difficult because of physiologic changes and restrictions on some diagnostic imaging techniques, such as X-rays. Furthermore, management of these patients is a big challenge.Case presentationWe present a case of a spontaneous cecal perforation in a 40-year-old pregnant black woman in the Regional Hospital of Bafoussam in Cameroon. The results of clinical examination and ultrasonography on admission were in line with acute generalized peritonitis in a woman at 20 weeks of a viable pregnancy, indicating an urgent laparotomy. Operative findings were a 1 × 1-cm perforation on a distended cecum with minimal fecal contamination. The treatment consisted of excision of the edges, primary suture of the perforation, and omentoplasty. The recovery of the patient was uneventful.ConclusionsThe management of spontaneous cecal perforation in a pregnant woman was a big challenge. The perforation was repaired by primary suture and omentoplasty. Further studies comparing this approach with right hemicolectomy are recommended.
Background Epidemiological transition in the developing world has resulted in a shift from infectious to non-communicable diseases as leading causes of morbidity and mortality, cardiovascular (CV) disease (CVD) is the first cause of death in Africa. However, data regarding the characteristic of patients with CVD are scarce, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. Purpose We built an observatory recording the characteristics of all patients admitted to hospital in CV departments and hospital care components in Sub-Saharan Africa (FEBRUARY Study). Methods We conducted a transversal and longitudinal study in CV departments of 29 hospitals from 14 African countries. FEBRUARY study was designed by a multidisciplinary collaborative team of epidemiologists, pharmacists and cardiologists from Africa and France. This ongoing observatory included all patients admitted in hospitalization during the month of February every year since 2016 and will continue every year. Data including socio-demographic and clinical characteristics, causes of admission, clinical, biological, complementary examinations, treatments, length of stay and discharge diagnosis were collected by the investigating physicians. Results Overall 2680 patients were admitted to hospital in February 2016 (n=736), 2017 (n=967), and 2018 (n=987) in CV departments from 14 countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Gabon, Guinea, Mali, Niger, Dem. Rep of The Congo, Senegal, Togo and Sudan (figure). Men represented 58,8%. Mean age of age was 54 years and Women 52 years. The mean length of stay was 9 days, and death rate 10,1%. The main cause of admission was cardiac failure (40,3%) followed by acute coronary syndrome (10.1%) and stroke (9,3%). Among CV risk factors, high blood pressure, sedentary behavior, diabetes, active tobacco consumption and dyslipidemia were present in 46%, 19%, 13%, 11% and 6% of patients, respectively. In a longitudinal analysis, hospital admission due coronary syndrome increased from 7% in 2016 to 10.5% in 2018 (p for trend = 0.03). Length of hospital stay and rate of hospital death remain stable. Hospitalizations by country (FEBRUARY) Conclusion The FEBRUARY observatory is an important tool to describe cardiovascular characteristics of patients in transversal analysis, but also the longitudinal evolution over the coming years in Sub-Saharan Africa.
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