The emergency room physician must confirm the presence of a rectal foreign body. Extraction in the emergency room is usually not possible and patient's with retained rectal foreign bodies should be referred to a colorectal surgeon.
Plastic bags were cheaper and as effective as polyglactin mesh for t-ACC. Survivors require a multidisciplinary approach in management, undergo a protracted hospital stay and later need complex incisional hernia repairs.
INTRODUCTION HIV positivity alone as a predictor of surgical outcome has not been extensively studied in regions of high prevalence. The aim was to determine the prevalence of HIV infection in surgical patients, and compare differences in their clinical course based on their serological status and CD4 counts. PATIENTS AND METHODS A prospective cohort of 350 patients, enrolled over 6 weeks, were studied. HIV status was determined in all patients. HIV-positive patients had CD4 counts. Clinical details were collated with HIV data after completion of enrolment. RESULTS Of the 350 patients, all but 6 were black South Africans. The median age was 31 years (range, 18–82 years). There were 143 trauma and 207 non-trauma patients. The male:female ratio was 1.4:1. The overall HIV seropositivity rate was 39% (females, 46%; males, 36%). Overall, 228 patients had surgical intervention and 96 patients had drainage of sepsis. The hospital stay (HIV negative, 11.9 ± 15.9 days; HIV positive, 11.0 ± 15 days) and mortality (HIV positive, 3.6%; HIV negative, 3.7%) did not differ by major diagnostic category. For HIV-positive patients, the male:female ratio was 1.2:1. There were 54 trauma and 83 non-trauma patients. An operation for the drainage of a septic focus was commoner in the HIV-positive admissions. Thirty-two (24%) patients had CD4 counts less than 200 cells/mm3, (i.e. AIDS). The hospital mortality, hospital stay and severity of sepsis were not related to CD4 counts. CONCLUSIONS HIV status does not influence the outcome of general surgical admissions and should not influence surgical management decisions. In HIV-positive surgical patients, CD4 counts have no relation to in-hospital outcome in a heterogeneous group of surgical patients.
HIV infection should not be considered a significant independent factor for major surgical procedures. Appropriate surgery should be offered as in normal surgical patients without fear of an unfavorable outcome.
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