Long-term outcomes of patients undergoing emergency surgery for corrosive injury of the upper digestive tract.

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Tác giả: Thitiporn Chobarporn, Dudsadee Mesiri, Chadin Tharavej

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: Japan : Surgery today , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 719790

 PURPOSE: Emergency surgery can save patients' lives in cases of severe caustic injury. However, the long-term outcomes are not well understood. METHODS: Patients who underwent emergency organ resection for severe corrosive acid injury were included. Subsequently, digestive tract reconstruction was performed to fit patients. Long-term outcomes were analyzed. RESULTS: Fifty patients underwent emergency digestive tract resection. The operative mortality rate was 6% (of 3/50). One of the 50 patients underwent successful immediate reconstruction. Of the 46 survivors with digestive tract discontinuity, 32 (70%) underwent subsequent reconstructive surgery, 10 (22%) died while awaiting reconstruction due to deterioration in their psychiatric and nutritional status, and 4 (9%) were unfit for reconstructive surgery. No operative mortality occurred during reconstruction. Among the 32 patients who underwent reconstruction, 30 (94%) achieved nutritional autonomy. Nutritional independence was achieved in 62% of the patients (31/50). At a median duration of 58 months, the median survival time of the 50 patients was 158 months. Patients who underwent reconstruction had a significantly better overall survival than those who did not (p <
  0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Emergency surgery remains the standard treatment for corrosive ingestion of complicated digestive tract injuries. However, only 60% of survivors can undergo subsequent digestive reconstruction and achieve long-term nutritional autonomy and a survival outcome.
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