ABSTRACT
The treatment in acute diverticulitis has undergone a considerable shift from an offensive to a more restrictive and individual indication for surgery. This review of the very recent literature with special regard to long-term observation of conservatively treated patients clearly shows that surgery is not required in any case of a first episode of severe diverticulitis, but should be recommended in high-risk patients under immunosuppression or chronic renal failure. In all other groups of patients the indication for surgery should be weighed on an individual basis after each episode, again aiming for the laparoscopic procedure. A therapeutic algorithm is proposed according to the Hansen-Stock classification.
Subject(s)
Colectomy , Diverticulitis, Colonic/surgery , Abscess/diagnosis , Abscess/surgery , Acute Disease , Algorithms , Colonoscopy , Diverticulitis, Colonic/diagnosis , Evidence-Based Medicine , Follow-Up Studies , Guideline Adherence , Humans , Intestinal Diseases/diagnosis , Intestinal Diseases/surgery , Intestinal Perforation/diagnosis , Intestinal Perforation/surgery , Risk FactorsABSTRACT
In various series reported in the literature on the operative management of severe head injuries with compound depressed skull fractures and penetrating wounds of the brain, the rates of infection differ from 1 to 17%. In this paper the operative experience with 22 cases of penetrating head injuries is discussed. In conventional operative therapy, depressed skull fracture and lacerated dura were covered by "Sulmycin Implant" containing Gentamycin as a helpful bacteriological barrier. 18 patients survived, 7 patients had severe neurological defects, 5 patients had mild neurological deficits and 6 patients recovered completely. There were no signs of suppurative complications in superficial wounds or in the brain. 4 patients died due to their severe brain damage with multiple contusional lesions. Postoperative complications were as follows: one patient suffered extradural and one patient subdural rebleeding. Another patient with a frontal base skull fracture suffered a pneumatocele because the fracture was not correctly covered. The revision was done successfully using the "Sulmycin Implant". Presently, however, the intradural use of "Sulmycin Implant" is not recommended without further testing for the level of gentamycin in the cerebrospinal fluid which is released by the "Sulmycin Implant".