Goal: To determine hospital frequency, to describe the clinical and therapeutic aspects and to determine the prognosis. Patients and Methods: This was a retrospective and prospective study carried out in the General Surgery Department from 1 January 1999 to 31 December 2015. Inclusion criteria: 1) open or closed trauma of the abdomen with perforation of the small bowel; 2) clinical examination (abdominal pain, vomiting, fever, abdominal contracture, evisceration, intraoperative findings); 3) paraclinical examinations: pneumoperitoneum on the abdominal X-ray without preparation (ASP) and CT scan. Exclusion Criteria: Abdominal trauma without perforation of the small bowel. We selected 128 patients operated for traumatic perforation of the small bowel. The data was entered and analyzed using Word, Excel 2007 and Statistical Package and Social Science Windows 16.0. The statistical analysis consisted in the calculation of the different frequencies of the variables studied. We used the Khi2 test with significance level P < 0.05. Results: We recorded 119 men versus 9 women and the sex ratio was 13.22. The mean age was 25 years with extremes varying between 15 and 70 years. The majority of patients 57.7% (74 cases) came from the capital, 46.1% (59 cases) were workers, 26.6% (34 cases) of the students. The average time to admission was 29 hours. The main etiologies were road traffic accidents 36.7% (47 cases), stabbing 21.9% (28 cases), firearm 14.8% (19 cases), and sports accidents 10.1% (13 cases). The main clinical signs were abdominal pain 48.44% (62 cases), abdominal contracture 60% (76 cases), disappearance of pre-liver dullness 66.36% (84 cases), and Douglas painful 74.4% (94 cases). The abdominal X-ray without preparation (A.S.P) allowed to objectify a pneumoperitoneum in 45.31% and the scanner a liquid effusion in 45.31% with the associated le-
The sigmoid volvulus is an acute strangulation of the colon by the twisting of the sigmoid loop around its mesenteric axis resulting in partial or complete obstruction of the colonic lumen. It is the most common intestinal volvulus and is an absolute medical and surgical emergency. Objectives: Determine the frequency of sigmoid colon volvulus, describe clinical and para-clinical signs, describe treatment, and determine morbidity and mortality. Methodology: This was a retrospective and prospective study performed in the General Surgery Department of Sikasso. This study concerned patients admitted and operated for sigmoid volvulus from January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2017. Retrospective Phase: We have created survey cards to study the following parameters: 1) The age and the sex; 2) The clinical signs and associated defects; 3) The radiological examinations, endoscopic; 4) The established treatment whether medical, or surgical; 5) The evolution and the postoperative consequences; 6) The admission period. Prospective Phase: At the admission each patient to benefit: a complete interrogation, a complete physical examination, additional examinations including radio of the abdomen without preparation, the rate of hemoglobin and hematocrit, grouping/rhesus. Support: Our data were collected from medical records and operating records of patients in the department. Results: We collected 54 cases of sigmoid volvulus (the annual frequency was 13.5 cases for year), which accounted for 58.1% of colonic occlusions 19.6% of intestinal occlusions and 5.9% of operative operations in emergency. The average age was 47.13 with extremes of 18 and 102 years, The sex ratio is 4.40% in favor of men. Abdominal pain, vomiting, stopping of materials and gases were present in 32 (59.3%) patients. Von Wahl's triad was present in 36 patients (66.7%), the rectal ampoule empty in 92.6%. On the X-ray of the abdomen without preparation, 70.37% of the image was recorded as a double leg. The sigmoid was necrotic in 37% of cases, and a sigmoid volvulus
Sigmoid volvulus on pregnancy is a rare surgical emergency. We report two cases treated in the General Surgery Department of Sikasso Hospital between January 2009 and December 2017. The mean age was 34.8 years and the gestational age ranged from 28 to 30 weeks. The evolution time was 4 days. The 2 patients were referred to us by gynecologist-obstetricians. They were operated after a short-term resuscitation. Inoperative the volvulus of the sigmoid was alone in 1 case; he was associated with a hail volvulus in the other. The volvated loop was necrotic in 1 case (small and sigmoid). A patient benefited from the Hartmann operation associated with a small bowel resection with end-to-end anastomosis. Simple sigmoidal detorsion was performed in one patient. We did not register a maternal death. The follow-up was simple in the 2 patients who gave birth vaginally.
Introduction: Despite the use of less invasive and increasingly effective techniques in order to reduce the morbi-mortality per and post-operative, the CPPO remain an important problem in surgery. Objectives: To determine the rate of per and post-operative complications, to describe the types of complications and to identify their risk factors. Methodology: This was a prospective study carried out from 04 April to 03 June 2016 in the surgical department of CHU-Gabriel TOURE. All patients aged 18 and over operated in the Surgical Department
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