Background: Oncological surgical emergencies of abdomen pose a typical problem for surgeons with respect to the choice of curative and palliative treatments and procedures in absence of opportunity for proper evaluation and support of multidisciplinary approach. For appropriate management, it is important to understand the epidemiological and clinical profile of this disease complex.Methods: A prospective analysis of abdominal emergencies encountered in emergency surgery department was done over a period of two years at a single institution and the malignancies were studied with respect to the pattern of clinical presentation and epidemiological characteristics.Results: At our centre, the incidence of intraabdominal oncological emergencies requiring surgery was found to be 6.56% of total emergent presentations excluding abdominal trauma cases. The overall mortality for study duration was 29% and the perioperative mortality within 30 days was 24%. Colonic malignancies (62%) and gastric malignancies (28%) were the most common to present as emergency. It was noted that small bowel (5%) and ovarian malignancy (5%) were not common. Perforation peritonitis was the only presentation as acute emergency in carcinoma stomach. In colonic malignancies, obstruction was the most common emergency presentation (92.5%) and perforation was an uncommon mode of presentation (7.5%).Conclusions: Surgical intervention appears to be unavoidable in the situation of a malignancy presenting as an emergency case, despite the awareness that most of these patients are going to have a limited life expectancy. A high rate of perioperative mortality is observed in emergent presentations of oncological abdominal emergencies.
While being considered a simple procedure among the wide spectrum of neurosurgical procedures, the surgical management of chronic subdural hematoma (SDH) still possesses a degree of variability. Present concepts of production versus absorption of chronic SDH fluid has led to practitioners differing in the use of drains, the treatment of inner membrane, the flushing of the subdural cavity, and the perioperative decision making for cases with comorbidities and a history of anticoagulant/antiplatelet usage. In this article, we present the management of chronic SDH over a period of 15 months using the principles followed at our center. In 60 patients of chronic SDH, with the use of drains, we waited for radiological demonstration of brain expansion before drain removal and discharge. In our experience, this has led to better prognostication and very low recurrence rates, particularly in patients with comorbidities and on anticoagulant/ antiplatelet medication.
Spinal cavernous angiomas are uncommon vascular malformations in the spine accounting for 5%-12% of all spinal vascular lesions. When present in an intradural extra-medullary location, these usually present with radicular pain and neurological deficits due to mass effect (myelopathy). Herein, we present an atypical presentation of cavernous angioma in a 54-year-old man with tinnitus, headache and sensorineural hearing loss. We have also reviewed 51 cases of intradural extramedullary cavernous angiomas including our case with respect to demographic and clinical profile. A 54-year-old man presented with tinnitus in the left ear and occipital headache with neck pain and slight weakness of left-hand grip along with atrophy of thenar muscles. His pure tone audiometry (PTA) test reveled mild left sensorineural hearing loss. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of cervical spine showed T2WI heterogeneously hyperintense left intradural extramedullary lesion at C7 vertebral body level. It was avidly enhancing with contrast. The patient underwent C7 laminectomy with a midline durotomy and complete excision of the lesion under neuromonitoring with sacrifice of the C8 sensory root. His symptoms improved following the surgery. The diagnosis of a cavernoma in an unusual location in the presence of cranial nerve dysfunction needs a high degree of diagnostic suspicion. Most of these cavernomas have a nerve root origin or attachment. The optimal treatment is microsurgical en bloc resection which leads to an effective resolution of both the symptoms.
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