Mechanism, management, and prevention of laparoscopic bowel injuries
- PMID: 8781935
- DOI: 10.1016/s0016-5107(96)70193-1
Mechanism, management, and prevention of laparoscopic bowel injuries
Abstract
Background: Inadvertent injury to the bowel is a rare but potentially fatal complication of laparoscopy. Such injury often goes unrecognized at the time of the procedure and only later is manifest by high morbidity and mortality.
Methods: We reviewed the mechanism and management of 10 instances of bowel injury known to have been encountered in a series of 4672 laparoscopic procedures performed at our hospital over the past 5 years.
Results: The usual causes of injury to the bowel wall were thermal burns, sharp dissection, and needle punctures. Six of the injuries were readily evident and treated immediately; four were unrecognized until 2 to 14 days after the procedure. One patient died of multiple organ failure on the third day after laparoscopy. Operative management in nine cases required simple closure or segmental resection. A high index of suspicion and vigilant physical examination were the keys to early recognition of bowel injury; laboratory and radiographic findings were nonspecific.
Conclusions: Suspected bowel injury following laparoscopy mandates early laparotomy to avoid life-threatening complications.
Comment in
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Diagnostic laparoscopy: is it "safe" in the hands of our surgical colleagues?Gastrointest Endosc. 1997 May;45(5):442-3. doi: 10.1016/s0016-5107(97)70165-2. Gastrointest Endosc. 1997. PMID: 9165336 No abstract available.
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