Modified Marcy hernia repair is a safe and effective procedure for inguinal hernia in children with excellent outcomes and a low incidence of recurrence.
Concurrent spontaneous hemopericardium and hemothorax due to anticoagulant use are extremely rare in clinical practice. Dabigatran is an oral direct thrombin inhibitor approved to prevent stroke or thromboembolic episodes in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. We report the case of a 73-year-old man who received dabigatran therapy (150 mg twice a day) for 3 months and developed massive spontaneous hemothorax and hemopericardium associated with fever. Emergency chest computed tomography scan established higher-density pericardial effusion (22HU) and left pleural effusion of heterogeneous density (5–15 HU) which could be hemorrhagic content while the heart ultrasound finding confirmed pericardial effusion 7–9 mm thick, without affecting hemodynamics. Almost 1100 mL of blood was drained by ultrasoundguided thoracentesis. After excluding other possible causes, diagnostic withdrawal was performed for dabigatran and no further pleural or pericardium effusion developed after dabigatran was discontinued. Therefore, practitioners could be aware of hemothorax as well as hemopericardium as a potential complication of dabigatran therapy.
Omental torsion is very rare, and its diagnosis is usually made only after surgery. At laparoscopy, omental torsion is suspected when the appendix is normal and the symptoms and findings of torsion are present. Laparoscopy is a safe and effective approach for the diagnosis and management of omental torsion, with the advantages of reduced postoperative pain and hospital stay.
In patients with AF, the presence of left atrial/left atrial appendage (LA/LAA) thrombus is related to an increased risk of thromboembolic events. Anticoagulation therapy, either with vitamin K antagonists or novel oral anticoagulants (NOACs) is therefore mandatory in AF with LA/LAA thrombus in order to lower the risk of stroke or other systemic embolic events. Despite the efficacy of these treatments, some patients will have persistent LAA thrombus remaining or may have contraindications to oral anticoagulation. Currently, little is known about the occurrence, risk factors and resolution rate of LA/LAA thrombus in patients who are already under optimal chronic oral anticoagulation, including vitamin K antagonists or NOACs. The common action in clinical practice in this scenario is switching from one to another anticoagulant drug exhibiting a different mechanism of action. Repeated cardiac imaging is then advised within several weeks to visually verify thrombus dissolution. Finally, there is a substantial scarcity of data on the role and optimal use of NOACs after LAA occlusion. The aim of this review is to critically evaluate data and provide up-to-date information on the best antithrombotic strategies in this challenging clinical scenario.
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: None.
Background
The occurrence of endoscopy-detected oesophageal lesions has been reported in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) after thermal-based pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) with even higher risk in patients undergoing ablation of the left atrial posterior wall (LAPW) (1). The main mechanism of oesophageal injury is thermal, resulting in oesophageal dysmotility, ulceration, perforation, or left atrio-oesophageal fistula formation, which are rare but life-threatening sequelae. Pulsed-field ablation (PFA) is a non-thermal ablation technology that uses high amplitude pulsed electrical fields to ablate tissues through cell membrane disruption (2). Precommercial experience with PFA reported no injury to the oesophagus for both PVI and LAPW ablation (3).
Purpose
To assess oesophageal safety in AF patients treated with three different PFA platforms.
Methods
In this single-centre experience we retrospectively analysed a total of 72 upper gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopies performed by a certified gastroenterologist one day after left atrial PFA. GI analysis focused on detection of oesophageal lesions nearest the left atrium and evidence of gastric hypomotility. PVI was performed using focal or single shot PFA catheters. Focal PFA catheters achieved PVI using the wide antral circumferential ablation (WACA) technique. LAPW ablation was performed exclusively by using single shot PFA devices.
Results
The patient characteristics were summarized in Table 1. Focal PFA catheters were used in 78% of patients. Post-procedure endoscopies revealed no mucosal lesions in any patient. Gastroparesis and perioesophageal vagal nerve injury were not found (Table 2).
Conclusion
PFA, whether applied by single shot devices or focal catheters, seems to be a safe ablation option with respect to oesophageal injury resulting from PVI and LAPW ablation in paroxysmal and persistent AF patients. Irrespective of catheter design, PFA configuration (monopolar versus bipolar, maximum output), or LA lesion set, we found absolute GI safety of PFA as class effect.
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