laparotomy incision
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2021 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 229-231
Author(s):  
Ugochukwu U Nnadozie, ◽  
Otuu Onyeyirichi ◽  
Charles C Maduba ◽  
Andrew C Ekwesianya

The caecum and appendix are uncommon contents of femoral hernia (Duari hernia). Diagnosis is usually intraoperative. We report a rare case of obstructed right femoral hernia in a 65-year-old woman. She was admitted into the accident and emergency department because of sudden irreducibility of a previously reducible right groin swelling of 5 years duration. She had obstructive symptoms with an irreducible right groin mass clinically diagnosed as obstructed right femoral hernia. A combination of infra-inguinal transverse incision and a lower midline laparotomy incision was used. The intraoperative findings included the herniation of the caecum and appendix into the right femoral canal. Patient had an uneventful recovery. Duari hernia is uncommon. A high index of suspicion and an experiencedsurgeon, who can handle uncommon findings should be involved in the management of obstructed femoral hernias.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (24) ◽  
pp. 2089-2093
Author(s):  
Hari Om Singh Sengar ◽  
Kailash Charokar ◽  
Prashant Nema

BACKGROUND The method adopted for incision closure has an influence on the outcomes of wound healing. The study was conducted to compare the ‘mass closure’ method with the conventional layer closure, and to find out the suitable surgical closure method for midline laparotomy incision. METHODS A prospective comparative study was conducted at a tertiary care teaching institute over a period of 2 years. Patients > 14 years of age, who were operated on by midline laparotomy incision, were included in the study group (N = 60). Either a ‘mass closure’ or the conventional layer closure method was adopted as per the operating surgeon’s choice. Based on the method used the cases were allocated into two groups, each with 30 patients. In the ‘mass closure’ group (Group A), continuous suturing was used in 22 patients and interrupted closure in 8 patients. In the ‘layered closure’ group (Group B), the abdomen was closed in layers using absorbable suture for the peritoneum (together with transversalis fascia) and non-absorbable for the linea alba. The patients were followed up postoperatively, and for 6 months after discharge from the hospital in follow-up for the detection of the wound complications. RESULTS The mean age of patients in Group A was 40.9 ± 15.48 years, and 41.03 ± 14.73 in Group B. There were 25 males and 5 females in Group A and 23 males and 7 females in Group B. Closure time of incision was significantly lower in the mass closure group (P < 0.05). The postoperative complications in Group A was 20 % (Seroma-1 patient, infection-3, partial wound dehiscence-1, and hernia-1). In Group B, the overall complication rate was 36 % (Seroma-3 patients, infection-5, burst abdomen- 1, hernia- 2). CONCLUSIONS Mass closure method is better than the conventional layer closure for the midline laparotomy incision. KEYWORDS Laparotomy, Layered Closure, Midline Incision, Mass Closure, Suture Technique


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Monika Rini Puspitasari ◽  
Agung Waluyo

Colorectal cancer is a malignancy that originates in the tissue of the colon and is the second leading cause of death worldwide. Laparatomy is one of the most commonly performed types of surgery. Pain can appear after the laparotomy due to the severity of body tissues. Writing this case study to identify the use of music therapy in interventions to reduce pain after laparotomy surgery in the case of Mr.S. Assessment of the pain scale uses the NRS (Numeric Rate Scale) while the patient's condition is through observation and intervention. The results of the observation found data if Mr.S said that the pain during activities was on the part of the laparotomy incision in the abdomen with an NRS 6 scale. The main nursing diagnosis in Mr. S's case was pain. The intervention given uses an approach based on nursing theoryKatharine Kolbaca is the theory of comfort. Management to manage pain can be done with pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies. The non-pharmacological therapy given to Mr. S. was in the form of music therapy that was selected independently by Mr. S. and carried out for 4 sessions in 2 days. The findings of this study were that the administration of music therapy had the effect of reducing the pain scale compared to the beginning of the assessment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 73 (9) ◽  
pp. 1630-1636
Author(s):  
Burak Kaya ◽  
Pedro Ciudad ◽  
Shih-Heng Chen ◽  
Luis Para ◽  
Hung-Chi Chen

2020 ◽  
Vol 187 (2) ◽  
pp. 68-68
Author(s):  
Michelle Hann ◽  
Dorina Timofte ◽  
Cajsa M Isgren ◽  
Debra C Archer

BackgroundSurgical site infection (SSI) is a leading cause of morbidity in horses undergoing emergency exploratory laparotomy for the treatment of acute colic. The exact mechanism by which SSI develops in these cases is unclear. This prospective observational study investigated whether bacterial translocation occurs in horses with acute colic and if there is an association between bacterial translocation and development of SSI.MethodsPeripheral venous blood (PVB) and peritoneal fluid (PF) samples were collected on admission and PF samples were collected at the end of surgery from horses presenting for investigation of acute colic. Any discharge from the laparotomy incision in horses that developed SSI was also collected. All samples were submitted for bacterial culture.ResultsIn total, 7.7 per cent of PVB samples (3/39), 11.8 per cent (4/34) of admission PF samples and 8.7 per cent (2/23) of the PF samples at surgery were culture positive. The prevalence of SSI was 10.2 per cent. No association was identified between a positive PVB or PF culture and development of a SSI or survival to hospital discharge.ConclusionBacterial translocation can occur in some horses with acute colic. However, we were unable to identify any association between bacterial translocation and the development of SSIs following emergency exploratory laparotomy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 945
Author(s):  
Hisham I. El Zanati ◽  
Waleed A. Aboelwafaa ◽  
Yasser M. Hamza

Background: Diagnostic laparoscopy is an added tool that has become widely available for the assessment of abdominal masses in addition to conventional imaging. It is the best real time imaging technique due to the magnification and intense illumination provided. The aim of this work is the assessment of the impact of performing diagnostic laparoscopy at the start of operations intended for resection of an abdominal mass.Methods: This prospective study included 40 patients admitted for surgical resection of an abdominal mass. All Patients were subjected to thorough conventional investigations followed by diagnostic laparoscopy performed prior to the start of the definitive operation. We assessed the extra time needed, complications encountered, effect on decision making and the overall benefit of laparoscopy in this context.Results: Overall 21 patients (52.5%) did benefit from diagnostic laparoscopy somehow between upgrading the staging, affecting the laparotomy incision site and confirming feasibility of laparoscopic resection. Of the patients who proceeded to a laparotomy (n=30), diagnostic laparoscopy missed local invasion in 7 patients, which precluded the resection of the tumor in 5 of them. Only 1 complication related to diagnostic laparoscopy was encountered in the form of a port-site hematoma (2.5%).Conclusions: While diagnostic laparoscopy doesn't carry significant added morbidity, it might save the patient an unnecessary laparotomy by altering the preoperative staging and improving the accuracy of anatomical and pathological diagnoses. Laparoscopy has its limitations mainly in the assessment of the retroperitoneal space as well as direct tumor invasion to adjacent organs and vessels.


2019 ◽  
Vol 104 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 567-574
Author(s):  
Hiroya Iida ◽  
Takayoshi Nakajima ◽  
Shinichi Ikuta ◽  
Tsukasa Aihara ◽  
Naoki Yamanaka

Introduction Laparoscopic surgery is recently becoming widespread in the area of liver treatment. However, mobilization of the liver is difficult using laparoscopy alone because of its volume and weight. Ensuring a wider visual field and controlling blood loss are also difficult. We used a hybrid approach involving direct vision and laparoscopy for performing hepatectomy through a small incision to overcome these problems. Case Presentation Mini-open hepatectomy was performed on 64 patients between January 2010 and December 2013. Mobilization of the liver was performed using the smallest possible laparotomy incision. Detachment of right or left triangular ligaments was done using laparoscopy because direct vision of the operation field was impossible. Hepatectomy was performed through a small laparotomy incision. Most operations (47%) involved partial resections. Of these, segmentectomies were performed on 20 patients, whereas lobectomy was performed on 7 patients. The median intraoperative bleeding was 565 mL, and the operative time was 247 minutes. The median postoperative hospital stay was 14 days. There was no postoperative mortality. Conclusion We present the clinical use of mini-open hepatectomy to aid the laparoscopic approach with satisfactory short-term results.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-30
Author(s):  
Wafaa T Salem ◽  
Khaled A Alsamahy ◽  
Wael A Ibrahim ◽  
Abear S Alsaed ◽  
Mohamed M Salaheldin

Background: Extended midline laparotomy incision is accompanied by intense pain postoperatively which affects patients’ physiology; therefore, good control of postoperative pain is mandatory to decrease the adverse effects on the body. Ultrasound-guided Bilateral Rectus Sheath Block (BRSB) is one of the options to achieve this goal. Objective: The study aimed to assess the analgesic potency of adding dexmedetomidine to bupivacaine in ultrasound-guided BRSB in cancer patients with a midline laparotomy incision. Methods: Sixty adult cancer patients planned for laparotomies with extended midline incision were included. Ultrasound-guided BRSB was performed immediately after the induction of anesthesia. Patients were classified randomly into two groups; B group, where only bupivacaine was used for BRSB and BD group in whom a mixture of bupivacaine and dexmedetomidine was used. Results: A significant decrease in visual analogue scale scores, total morphine consumption, postoperative nausea and vomiting and postoperative cortisol levels was observed in group BD. Conclusion: Dexmedetomidine as an adjuvant to bupivacaine in US-guided rectus sheath block bilaterally proved to be effective for proper pain management postoperatively in cancer patients after extended midline abdominal incision.


2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (08) ◽  
pp. 1143-1146
Author(s):  
Ammrah Tahir ◽  
Muhammad Sajid Hameed Ansari ◽  
Abdul Waheed Khan

Objectives: To compare the continuous and interrupted closure in term offrequency of wound dehiscence in emergency midline laparotomy incision. Study Design:Randomized controlled trial. Setting: Surgical Unit-I, Allied Hospital Faisalabad. Period: From15th March 2014 to 15th November 2014. Material and Methods: Two hundred patients werediagnosed clinically by taking thorough history and examinations were included. Fascial layerof wound of the patients sampled for group A was closed with interrupted mass closure withprolene no.1 whereas in group B was closed by continuous mass closure with prolene no1. All included patients were kept nothing by mouth. Resuscitation was done with, ringerslactate and blood transfusion if needed until adequate urine output (0.5 ml/kg/hr). Base lineinvestigations were done. After resuscitation and giving preoperative antibiotics, patients wereexplored through mid-line incision. Obvious source of contamination was dealt with accordingly.Variables wound were examined daily for any sign of dehiscence. Temperature pulse wasmeasured daily along with surgical site examination for any kind of discharge, stitches cutthrough and gut visibility through wound. In case of no complication patient was discharged ontenth postoperative day, which was the end point of study. Results: There were 61 (61%) malesand 39 (39%) females in group A, while in group B, 63 (63%) males and 37 (37%) females withmean ages of patients were 39.77+10.16 and 38.61+9.75 respectively. The wound dehiscencewere found 7 (7%) in Group-A and 18(18%) in Group-B while remaining 93 (93%) in Group-Aand 82 (82%) in Group-B had no morbidity statistically (p<0.01). Conclusion: It is concludedthat wound dehiscence is significantly higher in continuous closure as compare to interruptedclosure for emergency midline laparotomy incision for generalized peritonitis.


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