scholarly journals The Use of Self-Expanding Plastic Stents in the Management of Oesophageal Leaks and Spontaneous Oesophageal Perforations

2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. H. Moyes ◽  
C. K. MacKay ◽  
M. J. Forshaw

Leakage after oesophageal anastomosis or perforation remains a challenge for the surgeon. Traditional management has been operative repair or intensive conservative management. Both treatments are associated with prolonged hospitalisation and high morbidity and mortality rates. Self-expanding metallic stents have played an important role in the palliation of malignant oesophageal strictures and the treatment of tracheoesophageal fistulae. However, self-expanding metal stents in benign oesophageal disease are associated with complications such as bleeding, food bolus impaction, stent migration, and difficulty in retrieval. The Polyflex stent is the only commercially available self-expanding plastic stent which has been used in the management of malignant oesophageal strictures with good results. This review will consider the literature concerning the use of self-expanding plastic stents in the treatment of oesophageal anastomotic leakage and spontaneous perforations of the oesophagus.

Author(s):  
Aldo Edyair Jimenez Herevia ◽  
Luis Montiel Hinojosa ◽  
Diego Hinojosa Ugarte ◽  
Erick Martin Paez Hernandez ◽  
Enrique Obregon Moreno

Duodenal stenting has been widely used on malignant pathology on selected patients with poor prognosis and advanced disease. In these last years, there has been a clear ampliation of the clinical applications of endoscopy procedures and stents. Its use on benign pathology is spreading but there is a lack of literature about the complications in this context. The incidence of stent migration is about 10-25% in self-expandable metal stent (SEMS), and 2-5% on covered self-expanding metal stents (CSEMS). We reported a clinical case of a 48 years old patient who developed a duodenal ulcer. The patient was submitted to exploratory laparotomy, with duodenal primary closure of the ulcer. Later, the patient developed a enterocutaneous fistula because of the duodenal leak. It was referred to our third level hospital to the hepatopancreatobiliary surgery service. A new exploratory laparotomy with duodenal exclusion was planned, but it was impossible to access due to frozen abdomen. CSEMS was placed in the duodenal bulb resulting in the resolution of leaking, but the stent could not be removed because of migration. The stent trajectory was followed by abdominal x ray and tomography. The patient developed multiple intestinal an fecal enterocutaneous fistulas. It was submitted to multiples endoscopies, colonoscopies and enteroscopy without any success to reaching it. It was decided to perform a right lumbotomy to extract the prothesis. The stent was surgically removed, a planned stoma was left on the right flank on the extraction site.


2017 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 468-473
Author(s):  
M. K. Goenka ◽  
Usha Goenka ◽  
I. K. Tiwary ◽  
Vijay Rai

Medicine ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 97 (36) ◽  
pp. e12039 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinjing Zhang ◽  
Xuedong Wang ◽  
Liang Wang ◽  
Rui Tang ◽  
Jiahong Dong

2013 ◽  
Vol 95 (6) ◽  
pp. e23-e23
Author(s):  
R George ◽  
D Ganesan ◽  
TS Amarnath ◽  
R Balamurugan

The following abstracts won prizes at the 153rd East Midlands Surgical Society meeting held on 9 November 2012 at Leicester General Hospital. First prize was won by George et al. The paper by Ogunbiyi et al was placed second and the paper by Khanna et al was placed third.


2006 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 914-920 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesús García-Cano ◽  
Ferran González-Huix ◽  
Diego Juzgado ◽  
Francisco Igea ◽  
Manuel Pérez-Miranda ◽  
...  

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