• Title/Summary/Keyword: Surgical drainage

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Needle aspiration as therapeutic management for suppurative cervical lymphadenitis in children

  • Baek, Mee-Young;Park, Kyung-Hee;We, Ju-Hee;Park, Su-Eun
    • Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics
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    • v.53 no.8
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    • pp.801-804
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    • 2010
  • Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate the usefulness of the needle aspiration alternative to open surgical drainage of children with suppurative cervical lymphadenitis requiring surgical drainage. Methods: From January 1998 to June 2008, we retrospectively reviewed 38 children treated with needle aspiration as management with suppurative cervical lymphadenitis instead of open surgical drainage. Results: All 38 children underwent only 1 puncture. Two patients (5.2%) out of 38 patients experienced reformation of an abscess and all recovered completely after re-treatment with antibiotics. Minor complications were detected in 2 patients (5.2%). One complication originated from remnant necrotic tissue and the other involved formation of a small scar in two patients, which resolved spontaneously. There were no major complications. Conclusion: Needle aspiration can be a simple, safe, and effective alternative procedure to open surgical drainage of children with suppurative cervical lymphadenitis requiring surgical drainage.

Instrumental perforation of the esophagus the results of delayed surgical drainage more than 24 hours (식도질환의 기계적 처치후 발생한 식도파열 치험 -외과적 처치가 지연되었던 6예-)

  • 이두연
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.744-749
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    • 1986
  • Even in the hands of the expert endoscopists, an occasional instrumental perforation of the esophagus occurs. But instrumental perforation of the esophagus should not be difficult to diagnose if the possibility is borne in mind. Occasionally patient with esophageal perforations show little reaction at first, but usually they develop systemic manifestation if surgical management is delayed. Early surgical drainage of esophageal perforation is very important & effective therapeutic method. The delayed surgical treatment of esophageal perforation would have increased the morbidity & mortality by allowing mediastinitis & empyema thoracis. We have experienced 6 cases of delayed surgical management of instrumental perforation of esophagus from May 1974 to April 1986 in the department of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery, Yonsei University, college of the medicine. The ages ranged from 4 years to 57 years. The underlying esophageal diseases consisted of esophageal stricture in 3 cases, foreign bodies in the esophagus in 2 cases and esophageal ca. in one case. Most clinical manifestations on admission were high fever, chest discomfort, chest pain, dysphagia and subcutaneous emphysema. Most complications due to esophageal rupture were acute mediastinitis with or without empyema thoracis. Failure to diagnose promptly and failure to promptly institute adequate treatment undoubtedly were largely responsible for this patients death. All 6 patients had been taken delayed surgical drainage more than 24 hours following esophageal perforation. One patient had been in the open drainage state for long time and the another patient has been in the tracheostomy with postintubation vocal cord ulceration. The third patient died due to respiratory failure and sepsis due to fulminant mediastinitis & empyema thoracis. Even if the patients with esophageal perforation have been taken delayed surgical management, the patients should be survived with aggressive & effective surgical drainage with intensive post-operative care.

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Surgical Management of Thoracic Empyema.* - 330 cases - (농흉의 외과적 치료330)

  • 김치경
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.20 no.1
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    • pp.65-70
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    • 1987
  • Empyema thoracis following pneumonia, pulmonary tuberculosis, trauma and surgical procedures continues to be a source of major morbidity and mortality. We retrospectively reviewed the hospital records of 330 patients [child:87, adult243] treated for empyema thoracis at Catholic Medical Center between 1964 and 1986. The causes of empyema in these patients were as follows: pneumonia [C***:66%, A***:30%], pulmonary tuberculosis [C:2%, A:20%], lung abscess [C:3%, A:5%], postoperative complication [C:0%, A:13%], trauma [C:1%, A:4%] and unknown origin [C:23%, A:17%]. Three patients in this series died of sepsis from necrotizing pneumonia. Staphylococcus [29.3%], Streptococcus [8.8%], E. coli [8%], Mycobacterium tuberculosis [7.9%], Klebsiella [7.4%], Pseudomonas [6.4%], Bacteroides [3.4%] were the organisms most commonly isolated. Bacterial isolates were single in 68.3%, multiple 7.5% and absent 24.2%. The type of organism did not correlate with severity of disease or eventual requirement for closed thoracotomy drainage, open thoracotomy drainage [Modified Eloesser*s procedure], thoracoplasty, decortication or pleuropneumonectomy. Successful methods of treatment included aspiration in 44%, tube thoracotomy in 66%, open thoracotomy drainage in 98.7%, thoracoplasty in 98%, decortication in 96% and pleuropneumonectomy in 73%. Initial mode of management in empyema thoracis are thoracentesis and closed thoracotomy drainage. If the initial management was failed, we performed another surgical procedures. Before 1973, we manage with Schede`s thoracoplasty in the postpneumonectomy empyema patients. But thoracoplasty, with or without the use of muscle flaps, is a hazardous operation in the poor-risk patients. The permanent, open thoracotomy drainage is a relatively minor operation which is well tolerated even by cachexic, septic patients. It controls infection, and sometimes results in the bronchopleural fistula closing spontaneously.

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Perforated Afferent Loop Syndrome in a Patient with Recurrent Gastric Cancer: Non-Surgical Treatment with Percutaneous Transhepatic Duodenal Drainage and Endoscopic Stent (재발된 위암 환자에서 발생한 천공성 수입각 증후군의 비수술적 치료)

  • Song Kyo Young;Son Chang Hee;Park Cho Hyun;Kim Seung Nam
    • Journal of Gastric Cancer
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    • v.4 no.3
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    • pp.176-179
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    • 2004
  • Surgical treatment for afferent loop syndrome (ALS) in patients with recurrent gastric cancer is usually not feasible because of the recurrent tumor mass at the anastomosis site and/or extensive carcinomatosis resulting in bowel loop fixation. Furthermore, ALS usually makes oral intake impossible, resulting in a rapid deterioration in general condition. In this situation, gastroscopic stenting at the anastomotic site and/or percutaneous external drainage may be a more feasible alternative for palliation. We herein report a recurrent gastric cancer whose ALS was successfully treated with internal and external drainage procedures.

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Two Cases of Ultrasound-Guided Angiocatheter Irrigation and Drainage of the Head and Neck Abscesses (초음파 유도하 Angiocatheter를 이용한 두경부 농양의 세척 및 배농 2예)

  • Roh, Kyung-Jin;Suh, Michelle J.;Park, Sang-Chul;Kim, Hong-Jun;Kim, Bo-Mi;Shin, Hyang-Ae
    • Korean Journal of Head & Neck Oncology
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.230-233
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    • 2011
  • Head and neck abscess usually requires hospitalization, intravenous antibiotic therapy, and surgical incision and drainage. Open surgical drainage may result in unsightly scars. We report two cases of a 56-year-old man with a facial abscess and a 47-year-old man with a parotid abscess. The patients were successfully treated with ultrasound-guided angiocatheter irrigation and drainage without scar. Ultrasound-guided angiocatheter irrigation and drainage can be a simple, safe and effective alternative procedure to open surgery in the management of the selected head and neck abscesses.

Descending Necrotizing Mediastinitis : Importance of Thoracotomy Incision for Mediastinal Drainage : Case Report (하행 괴사성 종격동염: 흥부 절개에 의한 배액술의 중요성)

  • Park, Il-Hwan;Bong, Jung-Pyo;Seo, Jung-Ok;Kwon, Jang-Woo
    • Korean Journal of Bronchoesophagology
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.64-70
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    • 2009
  • Descending necrotizing mediastinitis(DNM) can occur as a complication of oropharyngeal and cervical infections that spread to the mediastinum via the cervical spaces. Delayed diagnosis and inadequate mediastinal drainage through a cervical or minor thoracic approach are the primary causes of a high mortality rate. Therefore, We emphasize that aggressive and emergent mediastinal drainage by surgical approach is most important method of DNM treatment. We studied 5cases diagnosed as DNM from 2005 through 2007. All patients underwent emergent surgical drainage of deep neck infection combined with mediastinal drainage through a thoracic approach. Primary oropharyngeal infection lead to DNM in four cases(80%) and odontogenic abscess in one case(20%). The outcomes were favorable 5patients. Overall mortality rate was 0%. The time interval from diagnosis based on manifestation of initial symptoms(oral or pharyngolaryngeal area) to surgical intervention was $7.4{\pm}4.2$days. One patient required reoperation due to remnant mediastinal abscess and pericardial effusion. Early diagnosis and emergent combined drainage with neck and chest incisions, together with broad spectrum intravenous antibiotics, should be considered standard care for this disease. And intensive postoperative care which it is continuous mediastinal irrigation and antibiotics use can significantly reduce the mortality rate.

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Surgical Experience with Descending Necrotizing Mediastinitis: A Retrospective Analysis at a Single Center

  • Ju Sik Yun;Cho Hee Lee;Kook Joo Na;Sang Yun Song;Sang Gi Oh;In Seok Jeong
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.56 no.1
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    • pp.35-41
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    • 2023
  • Background: We analyzed our experience with descending necrotizing mediastinitis (DNM) treatment and investigated the efficacy of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) for mediastinal drainage. Methods: This retrospective analysis included patients who underwent surgical drainage for DNM at our hospital from 2005 to 2020. We analyzed patients' baseline characteristics, surgical data, and perioperative outcomes and compared them according to the mediastinal drainage approach among patients with type II DNM. Results: Twenty-five patients (male-to-female ratio, 18:7) with a mean age of 54.0±12.9 years were enrolled in this study. The most common infection sources were pharyngeal infections (60%). Most patients had significantly increased white blood cell counts, elevated C-reactive protein levels, and decreased albumin levels on admission. The most common DNM type was type IIB (n=16, 64%), while 5 and 4 patients had types I and IIA, respectively. For mediastinal drainage, the transcervical approach was used in 15 patients and the transthoracic approach (VATS) in 10 patients. The mean length of hospital stay was 26.5±23.8 days, and the postoperative morbidity and in-hospital mortality rates were 24% and 12%, respectively. No statistically significant differences were found among patients with type II DNM between the transcervical and VATS groups. However, the VATS group showed shorter mean antibiotic therapy duration, drainage duration, and hospital stay length than the transcervical group. Conclusion: DNM manifested as severe infection requiring long-term inpatient treatment, with a mortality rate of 12%. Thus, active treatment with a multidisciplinary approach is crucial, and mediastinal drainage using VATS is considered relatively safe and effective.

A Surgical Experience of Adult TOF with Anomalous Systemic Venous Return (체정맥 이상환류를 동반한 성인 활로씨 4증후군의 치험 1례)

  • 유환국
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.24 no.11
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    • pp.1154-1159
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    • 1991
  • Anomalous systemic venous return to the right atrium is clinically innocuous and cause no functional disturbances or physiologic abnormalities by themselves and consequently require no treatment but may be surgical importance. We experienced a case of adult TOF combined with anomalous systemic venous drainage. Rudimentary right SVC with draining left sided vertical vein and IVC with separately drained left vein was revealed at operation time. With the bicaval cannulation, large sucker was used for drainage of blood from the left hepatic vein. Postoperative angiocardiogram showed above findings and combined double inferior vena cava at lumbar level.

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Gastric salvage after venous congestion during major pancreatic resections: A series of three cases

  • Ravi Chandra Reddy;Vikram Chaudhari;Amit Chopde;Abhishek Mitra;Dushyant Jaiswal;Shailesh V. Shrikhande;Manish S. Bhandare
    • Annals of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.99-103
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    • 2024
  • Pancreatic resections, depending on the location of the tumor, usually require division of the vasculature of either the distal or proximal part of the stomach. In certain situations, such as total pancreatectomy and/or with splenic vein occlusion, viability of the stomach may be threatened due to inadequate venous drainage. We discuss three cases of complex pancreatic surgeries performed for carcinoma of the pancreas at a tertiary care center in India, wherein the stomach was salvaged by reimplanting the veins in two patients and preserving the only draining collateral in one case after the gastric venous drainage was compromised. The perioperative and postoperative course in these patients and the complications were analyzed. None of these 3 patients developed any complication related to gastric venous congestion, and additional gastrectomy was avoided in all these patients. Re-establishment of the Gastric venous outflow after extensive pancreatic resections helps to avoid additional gastric resection secondary to venous congestive changes.

Pleural Infection and Empyema

  • Kwon, Yong Soo
    • Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
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    • v.76 no.4
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    • pp.160-162
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    • 2014
  • Increasing incidence of pleural infection has been reported worldwide in recent decades. The pathogens responsible for pleural infection are changing and differ from those in community acquired pneumonia. The main treatments for pleural infection are antibiotics and drainage of infected pleural fluid. The efficacy of intrapleural fibrinolytics remains unclear, although a recent randomized control study showed that the novel combination of tissue plasminogen activator and deoxyribonuclease had improved clinical outcomes. Surgical drainage is a critical treatment in patient with progression of sepsis and failure in tube drainage.