Adhesive Small Bowel Obstruction (ASBO): Role of CT Scan in Guiding Choice and Timing for Treatment Options

Author(s):  
Hariscine Keng Abongwa ◽  
Paolo Bresciani ◽  
Antonio Tarasconi ◽  
Gennaro Perrone ◽  
Fausto Catena
BMC Surgery ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Enric Sebastian-Valverde ◽  
Ignasi Poves ◽  
Estela Membrilla-Fernández ◽  
María José Pons-Fragero ◽  
Luís Grande

2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 454-456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamid AI Wadani ◽  
Naif Ibrahim Al Awad ◽  
Khairi Ahmed Hassan ◽  
Hazem Mohamed Zakaria ◽  
Abdulmohsen Al Mulhim A ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 498
Author(s):  
Almoutaz A. Eltayeb ◽  
Nagla H. Abufaddan

Background: The risk of post-operative adhesive small intestinal obstruction is highest during the first post-operative year. Bowel injury during adhesiolysis increases the post-operative morbidity. Consequently, the conservative management of small bowel obstruction has considerable interest. The aim of this study was to evaluate the therapeutic role of gastrografin in the management of small bowel obstruction.Methods: All patients with simple adhesive small bowel obstruction will be included and treated conservatively for 48hours unless there was evidence of strangulation. After the first 48hours all the patients were given oral gastrografin unless improved or signs of strangulation arise.  The evaluating parameters are the success rate, time to start full oral feeding and total duration of hospital stay.Results: Twenty-five cases were included in which two of them developed clinical evidence of strangulation during the first 48hours and were explored. Three cases improved on the conservative treatment. The remaining twenty cases were given oral gastrografin. Fourteen cases out of twenty showed the contrast dye in their large bowel by 24hours. Those 14 cases tolerated full oral feeding earlier and had shorter hospital stay than the remaining 6 cases that declared treatment failure and underwent surgical exploration.Conclusions: The use of gastrografin as a preliminary step of non-surgical treatment of simple adhesive intestinal obstruction may be helpful. However, further randomized study on a large number of patients was needed.


2021 ◽  
pp. 000313482098882
Author(s):  
Rachel S. Morris ◽  
Patrick Murphy ◽  
Kelly Boyle ◽  
Louis Somberg ◽  
Travis Webb ◽  
...  

Background Nonoperative management of adhesive small bowel obstruction (SBO) is successful in up to 80% of patients. Current recommendations advocate for computed tomography (CT) scan in all patients with SBO to supplement surgical decision-making. The hypothesis of this study was that cumulative findings on CT would predict the need for operative intervention in the setting of SBO. Methods This is an analysis of a retrospectively and prospectively collected adhesive SBO database over a 6-year period. A Bowel Ischemia Score (BIS) was developed based on the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma guidelines of CT findings suggestive of bowel ischemia. One point was assigned for each of the six variables. Early operation was defined as surgery within 6 hours of CT scan. Results Of the 275 patients in the database, 249 (90.5%) underwent CT scan. The operative rate was 28.3% with a median time from CT to operation of 21 hours (Interquartile range 5.2-59.2 hours). Most patients (166/217, 76.4%) with a BIS of 0 or 1 were successfully managed nonoperatively, whereas the majority of those with a BIS of 3 required operative intervention (5/6, 83.3%). The discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve) of BIS for early surgery, any operative intervention, and small bowel resection were 0.83, 0.72, and 0.61, respectively. Conclusion The cumulative signs of bowel ischemia on CT scan represented by BIS, rather than the presence or absence of any one finding, correlate with the need for early operative intervention.


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