Department of Neurosurgery, Kocaeli Derince Research and Teaching Hospital, Kocaeli, Turkey.
Department of Neurosurgery, Gülhane Military Academy Haydarpaşa Training Hospital, İstanbul, Turkey.
Balkan Med J. 2013 Dec;30(4):422-8. doi: 10.5152/balkanmedj.2013.8732. Epub 2013 Dec 1.
Textile products commonly used in surgery (e.g., sponges or gauze) have been known to cause complications after spinal surgery. Associated complications usually arise months or even years after the primary surgery. In case of spine surgery, these bodies are often detected during neuroradiological evaluations to investigate reported back pain; however, this complication often remains asymptomatic.
The research is intended to increase awareness among both spinal surgeons and neuroradiologists of this potential complication.
Retrospective study.
This study is a retrospective case series of three patients with retained surgical textile products who had been misdiagnosed with spinal tumour. The medical records of the patients were reviewed and demographic data, clinical aspects, initial diagnosis, surgical procedures, time interval between previous operation and onset of symptoms, laboratory findings, radiological findings, treatment, and outcome were analysed.
The three patients included two women and one man aged between 64 and 67 years. All patients had a previous surgery for lumbar disc herniation. The time from the previous surgical procedures to presentation ranged from 3 to 17 years. All patients presented with non-specific lower back pain and/or radiculopathy without clinical findings of infection. Laboratory parameters were otherwise normal. All three cases had been misdiagnosed as a spinal tumor based on magnetic resonance imaging findings. During new surgical procedures, gauze bandages, i.e., surgical textiles left during a previous operation, were found.
Textiloma is an important and rarely mentioned potential neurosurgical complication that may remain asymptomatic for years. They are more common in obese patients, after emergency surgery, and with unplanned changes in surgical procedure such as bleeding and unintended neurosurgical complications. Neuroradiological findings are variable and non-specific; thus, patients could be misdiagnosed with a spinal tumor or abscess. Likewise, in patients with a history of spinal surgery, spinal abscesses, haematomas, hypertrophic scars, fibrosarcomas, rhabdomyosarcomas, and schwannomas should definitely be considered in the differential diagnosis and considered when planning diagnostic procedures. Appropriate antibiotic therapy is recommended when a suppurative complication is present or suspected. Textiloma is a medico-legal complication that can be prevented by the education of surgical staff, the counting method (preoperatively, at closure, and at the end), and use of products with radiopaque barcodes.
手术中常用的纺织品(如海绵或纱布)已被证实会在脊柱手术后引起并发症。相关并发症通常在初次手术后数月甚至数年后出现。在脊柱手术中,这些物体通常在神经放射学评估中被发现,以调查报告的背痛;然而,这种并发症通常无症状。
旨在提高脊柱外科医生和神经放射科医生对这种潜在并发症的认识。
回顾性研究。
本研究是对三名被误诊为脊柱肿瘤的遗留手术纺织品的患者的回顾性病例系列研究。对患者的病历进行了回顾,并分析了人口统计学数据、临床方面、初始诊断、手术过程、上次手术与症状出现之间的时间间隔、实验室检查结果、影像学检查结果、治疗和结果。
三名患者均为女性和男性,年龄 64 至 67 岁。所有患者均因腰椎间盘突出症接受过手术。从上次手术到出现症状的时间为 3 至 17 年。所有患者均表现为非特异性腰痛和/或神经根病,无感染的临床发现。实验室参数均正常。所有三例均根据磁共振成像结果误诊为脊柱肿瘤。在新的手术过程中,发现了纱布绷带,即上次手术中遗留的手术纺织品。
纺织瘤是一种重要且很少提及的潜在神经外科并发症,可能多年无症状。它们在肥胖患者、急诊手术后以及手术过程中出现意外出血和意外神经外科并发症等计划外改变时更为常见。神经放射学表现多种多样且非特异性;因此,患者可能会被误诊为脊柱肿瘤或脓肿。同样,在有脊柱手术史的患者中,应在鉴别诊断中考虑脊柱脓肿、血肿、肥厚性瘢痕、纤维肉瘤、横纹肌肉瘤和神经鞘瘤,并在计划诊断程序时考虑这些疾病。当存在或怀疑化脓性并发症时,建议进行适当的抗生素治疗。纺织瘤是一种医疗法律并发症,可以通过对手术人员进行教育、计数方法(术前、关闭时和结束时)以及使用带有放射透明条码的产品来预防。