The use of spray electrocautery to control presacral bleeding: a report of four cases.

Am Surg

First Department of Propaedeutic General Surgery, Athens University Medical School, Hippocrateion Hospital, Q. Sophia 114, 11527 Athens, Greece.

Published: April 2007

Bleeding originating from the presacral venous plexus during pelvic operations is difficult to control, constituting a potentially life-threatening complication. Although suture ligatures, packing, and placement of tacks are established hemostatic techniques, they are often proved to be ineffective. We report a simple novel technique using spray diathermy for managing this severe complication. We have applied our method in four patients, two undergoing low anterior resection, and the others undergoing abdominoperineal resection for rectal cancer, that manifested severe presacral bleeding during rectal mobilization. Electrocautery at spray setting was applied slightly above the target bleeders at the presacral fascia, delivering a high-frequency electrical current in combination with drainage suction. In all cases, the method resulted in successful hemostasis. Applying spray electrocautery is a simple and effective method for controlling presacral bleeding. The advantages of using such a method instead of conventional hemostatic techniques include the option of varying the degree of haemostatic effect by altering the frequency and the volume of electric current.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

presacral bleeding
12
spray electrocautery
8
hemostatic techniques
8
presacral
5
spray
4
electrocautery control
4
control presacral
4
bleeding
4
bleeding report
4
report cases
4

Similar Publications

Retrorectal cystic hamartomas ("Tailgut cysts") are rare developmental cysts that appear in the retrorectal space, arising from aberrant remnants of the post-anal primitive gut in case of an incomplete embryogenetic involution. We present the case of a 30-year-old woman with a history of chronic lower abdominal pain. Other digestive symptoms, like rectal fullness, constipation, pain on defecation, rectal bleeding or genitourinary obstruction symptoms, were not associated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The authors report on a patient who presented with an extremely large presacral schwannoma and subsequent mass effect-induced hydronephrosis and kidney failure. To the authors' knowledge, this case represents the largest radiographically verified spinal schwannoma in the medical literature. The tumor presented here was more than three times as large as a typical giant schwannoma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Computed tomography (CT) small bowel three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction is a powerful tool for the diagnosis of small bowel disease and can clearly show the intestinal lumen and wall as well as the outside structure of the wall. The horizontal axis position can show the best adjacent intestinal tube and the lesion between the intestinal tubes, while the coronal position can show the overall view of the small bowel. The ileal end of the localization of the display of excellent, and easy to quantitative measurement of the affected intestinal segments, the sagittal position for the rectum and the pre-sacral lesions show the best, for the discovery of fistulae is also helpful.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chordoma is a malignant bone tumor originating from notochordal remnants, most commonly occurring at the sacrococcygeal junction. We present a case of a 70-year-old male with chronic pain in the lower lumbar spine. MRI performed elsewhere revealed a large tumor that involved S4, S5, and the coccyx with a presacral soft tissue component.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!