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1.
Pol J Radiol ; 88: e264-e269, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37404550

ABSTRACT

Despite improvements in the safety of surgical procedures, leaving a foreign object in a patient's body is still one of the complications of surgical procedures. The literature lacks an analysis of the effectiveness of specific diagnostic tests in detecting foreign objects. The authors present a discussion of the effectiveness of selected techniques and examples of the appearance of foreign bodies in radiological images based on the description of 10 cases. Leaving surgical haemostatic material in the abdominal or pelvic cavity is an underestimated phenomenon that poses a serious diagnostic problem. Computed tomography is the most sensitive method for detecting a foreign body, while a chest or abdominal X-ray is the simplest and most effective way to identify the surgical material. Ultrasound, although widely available, has not shown utility in diagnosing foreign bodies in our cases. Awareness of this problem is necessary to avoid unnecessary mortality in surgical patients.

2.
Pol Przegl Chir ; 95(3): 1-5, 2022 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36805987

ABSTRACT

The authors present seven cases of surgical drape left in body cavities during surgical operations. The most common symptoms reported by these patients are analysed and the consequences of leaving a foreign body in the abdominal cavity are summarised. In the majority of cases, the time elapsed from the operation to the detection of the foreign body was an average of 17 months. In one case, the foreign body remained in the abdomen for 7 years. The most common symptom reported by patients was abdominal pain. Some patients also developed wound healing disorders with leakage of pus from the wound, fever, nausea and vomiting, weight loss or intermittent tarry stools. In most cases, the foreign body required reoperation to remove it. Major surgery with stoma creation or bowel resection was required. In one case described, the consequence of leaving a surgical drape was the death of the patient. In three cases, there was spontaneous expulsion of the surgical sling by the patient by natural means.


Subject(s)
Abdominal Cavity , Foreign Bodies , Surgical Stomas , Humans , Abdominal Cavity/surgery , Reoperation , Abdominal Pain
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