Proper use of diagnostic techniques provides a high degree of success, and the treatment modality to be used depending on the type of the foreign body is mostly satisfactory.
Hydatid cyst disease is encountered in Turkey frequently. Rupture of a pulmonary cyst into the pleural cavity is rare, but represents the most serious complication of the hydatid disease. Surgical intervention was carried out in all cases in our clinic when expansion of the lungs could not be achieved. Open ends of the bronchus were closed and the pericyst layer was sutured after the removal of the germinative layer. We here present 5 cases of hydatid cysts with the above mentioned complication.
Between 1978 and 1997, 1730 patients with blunt thoracic trauma were treated in our department. There were 450 females and 1280 males. The mean age was 34.3 years ranging from 2 months to 80 years. The most frequent causes of trauma were motor vehicle accidents in 1438 patients and occupational accidents in 232. Injury to multiple intrathoracic structures was noted in 986 (57%) cases. There were associated injuries to the abdomen (13.76%), the head (23.35%), and the skeletal system (22.6%). Eighty-nine percent of the blunt thoracic traumas did not require open thoracotomy but immediate use of lifesaving measures such as closed tube thoracostomy for hemothorax or pneumothorax was necessary in 1543 cases. A laparotomy was carried out in 238 patients. The most common blunt thoracic traumas requiring immediate thoracotomy were massive hemothorax (33 cases), cardiac tamponade (2 cases), and massive tracheobronchial air leak (24 cases). Surgical intervention was necessary in 22 patients with diaphragmatic rupture and in 5 patients with isolated sternal fractures. During the posttraumatic period, adult respiratory distress syndrome occurred in 71 patients, pleural thickening in 29, and pleural empyema in 21 patients. The most common causes of morbidity were atelectasis (10.06%) and pneumonia (5.32%). The mean hospital time for all patients was 15 days and the mortality rate was 5.61%.
Intrathoracic migration of a Kirschner wire is a serious complication and immediate removal of the wire is mandatory. We describe a case of Kirschner wire migration from the left shoulder to the thorax. The wire was successfully retrieved from the intrapleural cavity.
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