Despite the fact that it is rarely found in the appendix during pregnancy, ectopic decidua can, in some cases, cause the occlusion of the appendicular lumen by extrinsic compression due to the expansion of endometrial tissue or due to decidua polyp formation. This condition consequently leads to appendicular inflammation. We report the case of a 27-year-old primigravida woman, 32 weeks of gestation, who presented to our facility with a 2-day history of isolated right iliac fossa pain. The diagnosis of an acute appendicitis was suspected and a planned appendectomy was performed. Microscopical examination showed appendicular deciduosis.
It is commonly admitted that laparoscopic surgery has the advantage of abdominal wall preservation. Therefore, having port-site incisional hernia caused by trocars of laparoscopy must be avoided. The aim of this work is to specify predictive factors, therapeutic modalities and to insist on prevention of this avoidable complication. It is a retrospective and descriptive study over a period of 10 years, between January 2006 and December 2015. This series includes 19 consecutive patients who present port-site incisional hernia. Age, initial intervention, site and size of the trocars incisional hernia, diagnostic method, delay and type of the second procedure with the final results were examined and recorded. Our study contains 19 female. The average age was 55 years (29-78). Risk factors were resent in 12 patients. All our patients were operated initially by laparoscopic approach. The average onset time was 6.6 months (3-12). Fourteen patients presented swelling at the trocar site and 5 patients had an emergent surgery due to the strangulation of the port-site incisional hernia. For these five patients a primary suture was made. Hernia content was the great omentum in 11 cases and small bowel in 8 cases. It was umbilical in 16 patients and in the left flank in 3 patients. They occur all where it was placed a 10 mm trocar. The evolution was suitable in all cases. There were two recurrences, one after primary suture and the other after a mesh repair. Port-site incisional hernia is rare. The most incriminated risk factors are essentially trocar size, obesity and open coelioscopy. Vital prognosis can be engaged if port-site incisional hernia is incarcerated or strangulated then prevention is necessary.
Introduction and importance A bezoar is an agglutination of ingested materials forming an indigestible and insoluble mass inside the gastrointestinal tract. Trichobezoars formed by ingested hair are rare. The stomach tends to be the typical location. In some cases there is an extension to the duodenum, jejunum or even to the colon and it is called Rapunzel syndrome. Case presentation We present a case of an occlusion due to double trichobezoars in 17 years old woman who underwent an extraction by enterotomy and gastrotomy. Clinical discussion Trichobezoar is a compact conglomeration of swallowed hair and makes up less than 6% of all bezoars. It appears in young women under 20 years of age who carry psychiatric or chronic metabolic diseases that can alter the behavioral balance. Physical examination is often poor in uncomplicated forms: forms without peritonitis or occlusion or hemorrhage or appendicitis or pancreatitis but it may reveal a well-limited, smooth, firm, and mobile epigastric mass. For uncomplicated forms or forms complicated by hemorrhage, the reference examination requested in the first line remains the esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) which allows a dual role both diagnostic and therapeutic. Computed Tomography (CT) remains the preferred imaging modality requested urgently in case of an occlusion or peritonitis presentation. Endoscopic extraction represents the therapeutic approach for uncomplicated forms but surgical treatment remains the main therapeutic means of trichobezoar. Conclusion Trichobezoars are rare and present both diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. Laparotomy remains the most successful surgical treatment although laparoscopy currently appears to have promising results in expert hands. A post-operative pscychologic management is essential to correct psychobehavioral disorders of patients to prevent recurrence.
Background The purpose of the present paper is to assess the morbidity specifics risk factors of hepatic hydatid cyst after conservative surgery. Methods We conducted a retrospective study of 102 patients over a period of 13 years, from 2006 to 2019. We included all patients operated on hydatid cyst of the liver, complicated and uncomplicated, in the Department of General Surgery in Tahar Sfar hospital, Mahdia, Tunisia. We excluded patients who received an exclusive medical treatment and those who have other hydatic cyst localizations. Results The cohort was composed of 102 patients with a total of 151 cysts operated on using conservative surgery, among them there was 75 women (73.5%) and 27 men (26.5%). The median age was 43, with extremes ranging from 12 to 88 years. The majority of patients (94.1%) were from rural areas. The cysts were uncomplicated in about half of the cases (48%), elsewhere complications such as compression of neighboring organs (25.5%), opening in the bile ducts (16.7%), infection (9.8%), and rupture in the peritoneum (2%) were found. Conservative surgery was the mainstay of treatment with an overall mortality rate of 1.9%. The overall morbidity rate was 22%: 14% specific morbidity and 8% non-specific morbidity. External biliary fistula was the most common postoperative complication (9%). The predictive factors of morbidity in univariate analysis were: preoperative hydatid cyst infection (P = 0.01), Compressive cysts (P = 0.05), preoperative fever and jaundice, (respectively P = 0.03 and P = 0.02), no one achieved statistical significance in the multivariate model. Conclusions Preoperative hydatid cyst infection, compressive cysts and preoperative fever and jaundice could be predictor factors of morbidity after conservative surgery for liver hydatid cyst. They must be considered in the treatment and the surgical decision for patients with hydatid cyst.
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