Grave thoraco-intestinal complication secondary to an undetected traumatic rupture of the diaphragm: a case report.


Journal

European journal of medical research
ISSN: 2047-783X
Titre abrégé: Eur J Med Res
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9517857

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
08 Feb 2021
Historique:
received: 19 11 2020
accepted: 23 01 2021
entrez: 9 2 2021
pubmed: 10 2 2021
medline: 16 2 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Diaphragmatic lesions as a result of blunt or penetrating trauma are challenging to detect in the initial trauma setting. This is especially true when diaphragmatic trauma is part of a polytrauma. Complications of undetected diaphragmatic defects with incarcerating bowel are rare, but as in our patient can be serious. A 57-year-old female presented to the Emergency Room of our Hospital in a critical condition with 3 days of increasing abdominal pain. The initial clinical examination showed peritonism with tinkling peristaltic bowel sounds of mechanical obstruction. A thoraco-abdominal CT scan demonstrated colon prolapsed through the left diaphragmatic center with a large sero-pneumothorax under tension. As the patient was hemodynamically increasingly unstable with developing septic shock, an emergency laparotomy was performed. After retraction of the left colon, which had herniated through a defect of the tendinous center of the left diaphragm and was perforated due to transmural ischemia, large amounts of feces and gas discharged from the left thorax. A left hemicolectomy resulting in a Hartmann-type procedure was performed. A fully established pleural empyema required meticulous debridement and lavage conducted via the 7-10 cm in diameter phrenic opening followed by a diaphragmatic defect reconstruction. Due to pneumonia and recurring pleural empyema redo-debridement of the left pleural space via thoracotomy were required. The patient was discharged on day 56. A thorough history of possible trauma revealed a bicycle-fall trauma 7 months prior to this hospitalization with a surgically stabilized fracture of the left femur and conservatively treated fractures of ribs 3-9 on the left side. This is the first report on a primarily established empyema at the time of first surgical intervention for feco-pneumothorax secondary to delayed diagnosed diaphragmatic rupture following abdomino-thoracic blunt trauma with colic perforation into the pleural space, requiring repetitive surgical debridement in order to control local and systemic sepsis. Thorough investigation should always be undertaken in cases of blunt abdominal and thoracic trauma to exclude diaphragmatic injury in order to avoid post-traumatic complications.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Diaphragmatic lesions as a result of blunt or penetrating trauma are challenging to detect in the initial trauma setting. This is especially true when diaphragmatic trauma is part of a polytrauma. Complications of undetected diaphragmatic defects with incarcerating bowel are rare, but as in our patient can be serious.
CASE PRESENTATION METHODS
A 57-year-old female presented to the Emergency Room of our Hospital in a critical condition with 3 days of increasing abdominal pain. The initial clinical examination showed peritonism with tinkling peristaltic bowel sounds of mechanical obstruction. A thoraco-abdominal CT scan demonstrated colon prolapsed through the left diaphragmatic center with a large sero-pneumothorax under tension. As the patient was hemodynamically increasingly unstable with developing septic shock, an emergency laparotomy was performed. After retraction of the left colon, which had herniated through a defect of the tendinous center of the left diaphragm and was perforated due to transmural ischemia, large amounts of feces and gas discharged from the left thorax. A left hemicolectomy resulting in a Hartmann-type procedure was performed. A fully established pleural empyema required meticulous debridement and lavage conducted via the 7-10 cm in diameter phrenic opening followed by a diaphragmatic defect reconstruction. Due to pneumonia and recurring pleural empyema redo-debridement of the left pleural space via thoracotomy were required. The patient was discharged on day 56. A thorough history of possible trauma revealed a bicycle-fall trauma 7 months prior to this hospitalization with a surgically stabilized fracture of the left femur and conservatively treated fractures of ribs 3-9 on the left side.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
This is the first report on a primarily established empyema at the time of first surgical intervention for feco-pneumothorax secondary to delayed diagnosed diaphragmatic rupture following abdomino-thoracic blunt trauma with colic perforation into the pleural space, requiring repetitive surgical debridement in order to control local and systemic sepsis. Thorough investigation should always be undertaken in cases of blunt abdominal and thoracic trauma to exclude diaphragmatic injury in order to avoid post-traumatic complications.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33557953
doi: 10.1186/s40001-021-00488-9
pii: 10.1186/s40001-021-00488-9
pmc: PMC7871382
doi:

Types de publication

Case Reports Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

19

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Auteurs

Morris Beshay (M)

Department of Thoracic Surgery, University Hospital OWL of the University Bielefeld, campus Bielefeld-Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany.

Martin Krüger (M)

Department of Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology, University Hospital OWL of the University Bielefeld, campus Bielefeld-Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany.

Kashika Singh (K)

Department of General and Visceral Surgery, University Hospital OWL of the University Bielefeld, campus Bielefeld-Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany.

Rainer Borgstedt (R)

Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care, Emergency-, Transfusion- and Pain-Medicine, University Hospital OWL of the University Bielefeld, campus Bielefeld-Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany.

Tahar Benhidjeb (T)

Department of General and Visceral Surgery, University Hospital OWL of the University Bielefeld, campus Bielefeld-Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany.

Edwin Bölke (E)

Medical Faculty, Department of Radiation Oncology, Heinrich Heine University, Duesseldorf, Germany.

Thomas Vordemvenne (T)

Department of Trauma Surgery and Orthopedics, University Hospital OWL of the University Bielefeld, campus Bielefeld-Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany.

Jan Schulte Am Esch (J)

Department of General and Visceral Surgery, University Hospital OWL of the University Bielefeld, campus Bielefeld-Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany. jan.schulteamesch@evkb.de.
Department of General and Visceral Surgery, Evangelisches Klinikum Bethel, Schildescher Str. 99, 33611, Bielefeld, Germany. jan.schulteamesch@evkb.de.

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