- Colorectal Foreign Bodies: Six Cases Report and Review of the Literature
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Hyoungran Kim, Seokho Choi, Jeongseok Yun
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J Trauma Inj. 2015;28(1):51-54. Published online March 30, 2015
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.20408/jti.2015.28.1.51
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- The incidence of foreign body insertion in the anorectum is rare, however, it is increasing, especially in urban populations. Foreign objects in the anorectum can be of different sizes, shapes and materials. Frangible objects like glass or beakers, and sharp foreign bodies that may easily injure the bowel mucosa are particularly dangerous. Physicians have to consider more innovative options on how to extract these foreign bodies without inciting injury; and, if injury would occur, consider different techniques to repair it, whether transanally or transabdominally, and opt for primary repair, or resection with either anastomosis or stoma creation. Here, I introduce our cases with colorectal foreign bodies and present several literatures to help physicians decide when presented with cases like these.
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- Bike handlebar grip in the rectum: minimally invasive endoscopic management
Danilo Paduano, Francesco Auriemma, Mario Bianchetti, Alessandro Repici, Benedetto Mangiavillano Endoscopy.2022; 54(02): E42. CrossRef
- Management of Bile Leaks from Bilateral Intrahepatic Ducts after Blunt Trauma
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Dong Hun Kim, Seokho Choi, Seung Je Go
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J Trauma Inj. 2014;27(3):89-93.
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Abstract
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- Bile leaks are complications that are much more frequent after a high-grade liver injury than after a low-grade liver injury. In this report, we describe the management of bile leaks that were encountered after angiographic embolization in a 27-year-old man with a high-grade blunt liver injury. He had undergone an abdominal irrigation and drainage with a laparotomy on post-injury day (PID) 16 due to bile peritonitis and continuous bile leaks from percutaneous abdominal drainage. He required three percutaneous drainage procedures for a biloma and liver abscesses in hepatic segments 4, 5 and 8, as well as endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with biliary stent placement into the intrahepatic biloma via the common bile duct. We detected communication between the biloma and the bilateral intrahepatic duct by using a tubogram. Follow-up abdominal computed tomography on PID 47 showed partial thrombosis of the inferior vena cava at the suprahepatic level, and the patient received anticoagulation therapy with low molecular weight heparin and rivaroxaban. As symptomatic improvement was achieved by using conservative management, the percutaneous drains were removed and the patient was discharged on PID 82.
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