Foreign carcasses found in the digestive tract show a challenge in the emergency areas. Decision-making is quite important and bear be done in a distinguishing time frame to favor an opportune interference scenario. In order to pick the right intervention, it is necessary to painstakingly assess the patient and enact the type of foreign body, its area, clinical syndromes, time elapsed because insertion and different co-existing factors. Most of moment of truth, foreign objects will pass instinctively or can be removed endoscopically or colonoscopically; occasionally, surgical intervention should. There are no clear guidelines for foreign bulks accommodated in the colon for a very long time, and in most cases, this is not a common position and requires a combining several branches of learning approach. This chapter reviews foreign crowd' management and presents two cases of offshore objects found in the colon. Both cases have had a subtle never-ending evolution contingent upon silent colon perforation and made necessary surgical intervention.
Author(s) Details:
Bogdan Severus Gaspar,
Surgery
Clinic, Emergency Clinical Hospital, Bucharest-014461, Romania and Department
of Surgery, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest-050474,
Romania.
Sanda
Maria Cretoiu,
Department
of Morphological Sciences, Cell and Molecular Biology and Histology, Carol
Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest-050474, Romania.
Iulia Cristina Pîrvulescu,
Surgery Clinic, Emergency Clinical Hospital, Bucharest-014461,
Romania.
Alfred Najm,
Surgery Clinic, Emergency Clinical Hospital, Bucharest-014461,
Romania and Department of Surgery, Carol Davila University of Medicine and
Pharmacy, Bucharest-050474, Romania.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/NRAMMS-V6/article/view/12139
No comments:
Post a Comment