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Qatar Medical Journal. 2009; 18 (1): 18-21
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-111088

ABSTRACT

To assess the possibility of pre-operative differentiation of strangulated and non-strangulated intestinal obstruction based on clinical; radiological and laboratory features without CT scan, 66 patients with acute bowel obstruction were studied prospectively. Forty-nine [74%] were male, 17 [26%] female with a wide age distribution. In 56 [85%] the small bowel was obstructed, in ten [15%] the large bowel. Adhesions were the most common cause of obstruction [36%], followed by hernias [20%], volvulus [12%], intussusception [11%], malignancies [11%] and other causes [10%]. At surgery strangulation, defined as compromise of the blood supply and necessitating resection of gangrenous bowel, was found in 18 [27%] of the patients. Ten patients [15%] developed complications after surgery and ten patients died, mostly from age and cardiovascular conditions. Persistent abdominal pain, rebound tenderness, elevated temperature, leukocytosis, and air-fluid levels were considered as possible predictive factors for the pre-operative diagnosis of strangulation but it was concluded that such factors were not sufficiently reliable and early surgery was imperative to detect reversible ischemic bowel in strangulated obstruction


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Preoperative Care , Postoperative Complications , Diagnosis, Differential , Intestinal Obstruction/surgery , Tissue Adhesions/complications
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