Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 8 de 8
Filter
1.
G Chir ; 38(5): 225-228, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29280701

ABSTRACT

AIM: Laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (LAGB) migration is an uncommon late complication after bariatric surgery. It usually presents with an unexplained weight increase or without any symptom. Current guidelines do not establish the timing of a clear endoscopic follow-up to prevent and/or to treat this kind of complication. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Long-term follow-up was performed in 217 patients with LAGB (37 underwent surgery in other bariatric centers). At the endoscopic check, 3 patients presented banding erosion respectively 7, 9 and 11 years after surgery. In all three cases the patients, lost at the follow-up in their bariatric centers, had weight gain. During the endoscopy was treated just one patient because of the advanced migration. For the other patients, with a minimal migration, the choice was to perform an endoscopic surveillance every 4 months. DISCUSSION: Removal of eroded gastric banding with common endoscopic devices is feasible, safe, and effective. CONCLUSION: With our experience we suggest to perform planned endoscopy at least within 2 years in order to guarantee the early diagnosis and managing of gastric banding erosion.


Subject(s)
Foreign-Body Migration/surgery , Gastroplasty/instrumentation , Laparoscopy , Postoperative Complications/surgery , Stomach , Follow-Up Studies , Gastroplasty/methods , Humans , Time Factors
3.
Int J Surg Case Rep ; 17: 55-7, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26551553

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Esophageal perforation in adults is most frequently caused by ingested foreign bodies. They can migrate through the esophageal wall, damaging the nearby organs such as the aorta or the trachea, with fatal outcome. After the diagnosis, the viable treatments for extracting the foreign body and repairing the perforation are several. The appropriate treatment, may be endoscopic, surgical or combined, depending on the level of the perforation, on the co-morbidities of the patient and on the available resources. PRESENTATION OF CASE: This paper describes a case of a 68 years old patient with a double EP caused by a meat-bone that perforated the thoracic esophageal wall, approaching the aorta on the left side and the azygos vein on the right side. DISCUSSION: Because of the double transfixion and the position near the aorta and the azygos, it was not possible to remove safely the bone during the endoscopy. The management required a combined endoscopic and surgical approach. This way it was possible to detect easily the location of the perforation, to remove safely the foreign body, to repair the perforation both from the outside and from the inside, and to place the nasogastric tube under direct vision. CONCLUSION: Even when the type of esophageal perforation requires surgical treatment, the simultaneous use of endoscopy proved to be an advantage in order to extract the foreign body safely, to perform a double repair of the perforation and to place the nasogastric tube under direct vision.

4.
G Chir ; 33(11-12): 420-2, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23140930

ABSTRACT

Colonic lipomas larger than 2 cm in diameter are likely to be symptomatic. In some cases a complication is the first clinical sign. Massive lower intestinal bleeding or obstruction, acute bleeding, prolapse or perforation or, rarely, acute intussusception with intestinal obstruction require urgent surgery. Diagnosis is often made following colonoscopy, which can also have a therapeutic role. Imaging procedures such as CT has a secondary role. Patients with small asymptomatic colonic lipomas need regular follow up. For larger (diameter > 2 cm) and/or symptomatic lipomas, resection should be considered, although the choice between endoscopic or surgical resection remains controversial. We believe that even lipomas > 2 cm can safely be removed by endoscopic resection. If surgery is indicated, we consider laparoscopy to be the ideal approach in all patients for whom minimally invasive surgery is not contraindicated.


Subject(s)
Colectomy/methods , Colonic Neoplasms/surgery , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/surgery , Ileal Neoplasms/surgery , Ileocecal Valve/surgery , Intussusception/surgery , Laparoscopy , Lipoma/surgery , Adult , Aged , Colonic Neoplasms/complications , Colonic Neoplasms/diagnosis , Colonoscopy , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/diagnosis , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/etiology , Humans , Ileal Neoplasms/complications , Ileal Neoplasms/diagnosis , Ileocecal Valve/pathology , Intussusception/diagnosis , Intussusception/etiology , Lipoma/complications , Lipoma/diagnosis , Male , Middle Aged , Sigmoid Neoplasms/surgery , Treatment Outcome , Video-Assisted Surgery
5.
Minerva Chir ; 62(1): 51-60, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17287696

ABSTRACT

Anisakidosis is a parasitic disease of the human gastrointestinal tract caused by ingestion of larvae of marine nematodes such as Anisakis spp. or, rarely, Pseudoterranova spp., present in raw or undercooked fish. We report the first series of gastric Anisakis infection (anisakiasis) from a single centre in Italy. In our department, we observed 3 cases, all in women who were urgently hospitalized following intense epigastric pain and vomiting, developed after the ingestion of raw fish. The patients underwent urgent gastroscopy within a few hours. In each, a worm was extracted from the gastric mucosa by means of biopsy forceps. This was followed by prompt clinical improvement. The worm was identified by its macroscopic and microscopic characteristics as an Anisakis spp. larva (L3). In 2 cases, laboratory tests revealed marked leukocytosis and eosinophilia in the peripheral blood 3-4 days after ingestion of the raw fish. The diagnosis of anisakiasis can be made by endoscopy, radiology and abdominal ultrasound, but is often made only at surgery. In the gastric form of the disease, urgent gastroscopy has both a diagnostic and a therapeutic role, because the worm can be removed by means of biopsy forceps.


Subject(s)
Anisakiasis/surgery , Acute Disease , Animals , Anisakiasis/parasitology , Anisakis/ultrastructure , Female , Humans , Italy , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Middle Aged
6.
Chir Ital ; 51(6): 429-34, 1999.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10742892

ABSTRACT

Acute perforated diverticulitis of the colon is still a serious clinical event that requires an emergency treatment which is based upon clinical staging and pathological characteristics. Surgical treatment, performed in Hinchey's stages III and IV, is correlated with the presence of infection in the peritoneal cavity: it is always necessary to remove the septic focus, but there are different reconstruction strategies. The resection of the diseased colonic segment can be performed with primary anastomosis or Hartmann's operation with reconstruction in a later time. In our experience, based on 97 patients (33 of which, Hinchey's III and IV, underwent emergency surgical treatment) we preferred Hartmann's operation which carries a low risk of mortality in seriously ill patients.


Subject(s)
Colonic Diseases/surgery , Diverticulitis/surgery , Intestinal Perforation/surgery , Acute Disease , Aged , Colonic Diseases/complications , Digestive System Surgical Procedures/methods , Diverticulitis/complications , Female , Humans , Intestinal Perforation/complications , Male , Middle Aged
7.
Ann Ital Chir ; 68(4): 549-52; discussion 553, 1997.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9494187

ABSTRACT

The schwannomas are rare tumors taking origin from Schwann's cells; even rarer is their location at a peripheral level. Even if they show the macroscopic and microscopic characteristics of a benign tumor, it is possible that they engage malignant course, with possibility of recurrency and of distant metastasis. In the alimentary tract the schwannomas reveal with repeated episodes of digestive hemorrhage which could engage, according to the location, the characters of enterorrhagia or melena. Arteriography has the higher diagnostic sensibility, in course of bleeding. The CT could demonstrate a submucosal neoplasia. The diagnosis of schwannomas is based on the immunohistochemical search of the protein S100, that allows to differentiate them from the tumors of muscular origin, having such tumors common histological and cytological aspects. The schwannomas are today set in the widest chapter of the so-called "stromal tumors of the gastrointestinal tract" (GISTs) with an indefinite malignancy which need surgical excision and an attentive follow-up. The authors report a case of schwannoma located at the first jejunal loop, having had repeated episodes of digestive hemorrhage. The diagnosis was based on the selective arteriography of the upper mesenteric artery and the immunohistochemical search of the protein S100. The surgical treatment consisted of the resection of the jejunal loop, after having sought for eventual multiple locations of the neoplasia.


Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/etiology , Jejunal Neoplasms/complications , Neurilemmoma/complications , Female , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/surgery , Humans , Jejunal Neoplasms/pathology , Jejunal Neoplasms/surgery , Middle Aged , Neoplasm Proteins/analysis , Neurilemmoma/pathology , Neurilemmoma/surgery , S100 Proteins/analysis
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...