A rare complication of secondary pneumothorax following exploratory laparotomy for a small bowel obstruction: Case report

Small bowel obstruction (SBO) is recognized as the most common surgical emergency following abdominal procedures. Moreover, a pneumothorax secondary to an SBO is an infrequent phenomenon less commonly reported in recent literature. Clinical presentation includes progressive dyspnea and fatigue. The...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of surgery case reports 2023-01, Vol.102, p.107825, Article 107825
Hauptverfasser: Seth, Abhishek, Padda, Inderbir, Chaudhry, Rizwan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Small bowel obstruction (SBO) is recognized as the most common surgical emergency following abdominal procedures. Moreover, a pneumothorax secondary to an SBO is an infrequent phenomenon less commonly reported in recent literature. Clinical presentation includes progressive dyspnea and fatigue. The diagnosis was made with imaging. In this case report, the authors present a rare case of concurrent surgical complications (pneumothorax, SBO, perforation of the stomach, and hiatal hernia). A 62 years-old African American patient who presented with severe sudden onset difficulty breathing two days following laparoscopic toupet fundoplication procedure. She was given oxygen via cannula and the underwent chest tube insertion. She was then transferred to different facility under care of a cardio thoracic surgeon. Although SBO is most common emergency following an abdominal procedure, pneumothorax is rarely reported. This case report depicts a unique presentation of pneumothorax secondary to SBO and a discussion section conferring complication risk versus benefits of diverse management modalities (surgical or conservative), and a review of recent literature, further aiding healthcare professionals in the diagnosis and management of patients with SBO complications. Review of this case and the literature show a rare presentation of secondary pneumothorax following exploratory laparotomy for SBO. Recognizing the clinical signs and even a small suspicion should prompt one to order imaging. Chest X-ray is inexpensive and can rapidly rule out pneumothorax. These complications have high mortality in patients above the age of 60 years, hence, timely management is of utmost importance. •A patient presented with severe dyspnea two days after exploratory laparotomy.•Imaging showed secondary pneumothorax post small bowel obstruction.•The patient was put on oxygen and chest tube insertion was done.•The patient was transferred to a facility under care of a cardio-thoracic surgeon.
ISSN:2210-2612
2210-2612
DOI:10.1016/j.ijscr.2022.107825