Siasios Ioannis, Vakharia Kunal, Khan Asham, Meyers Joshua E, Yavorek Samantha, Pollina John, Dimopoulos Vassilios
Department of Neurosurgery, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, New York, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Buffalo General Medical Center, Kaleida Health, Buffalo, New York, USA.
J Spine Surg. 2018 Mar;4(1):130-137. doi: 10.21037/jss.2018.03.10.
Although rarely documented in the medical literature, bowel perforation injury can be a severe complication of spine surgery. Our goal was to review current literature regarding this complication and study possible methods of avoidance. We conducted a literature search in the PubMed database between January 1960 and March 2016 using the terms abrasion, bowels, bowel, complication, injury, intestine, intra-abdominal sepsis/shock, perforation, lumbar, spine, surgery, visceral. Diagnostic criteria, outcomes, risk factors, surgical approach, and treatment strategy were the parameters extracted from the search results and used for review. Thirty-one patients with bowel injury were recognized in the literature. Bowel injury was more frequent in patients who underwent lumbar discectomy and microdiscectomy (18 of 31 patients, 58.1%). Minimally invasive surgery and lateral techniques involving fusions accounted for 10 of the reported cases (32.3%). Finally, 2 cases (6.5%) were reported in conjunction with sacrectomies and 1 case (3.2%) with posterior fusion plus anterior longitudinal ligament (ALL) release. Diagnosis was made mostly by clinical signs/symptoms of acute abdominal pain, post-surgical wound infection, and abscess or enterocutaneous fistulas. Significant risk factors for postoperative bowel injury were complex surgical anatomy, medical history of previous abdominal surgeries or infections, irradiation before surgery, errors related to surgical technique, lack of surgical experience, and instrumentation failure. The overall mortality rate from bowel injury was 12.9% (4 of 31 patients). The overall morbidity rate was 87.1% (27 of 31 patients). According to our review of the literature, bowel injury is linked to significant morbidity and mortality. It can be prevented with meticulous pre-surgical planning. When it occurs, timely treatment reduces the risks of morbidity and mortality.
尽管在医学文献中鲜有记载,但肠穿孔损伤可能是脊柱手术的一种严重并发症。我们的目标是回顾有关该并发症的当前文献,并研究可能的预防方法。我们于1960年1月至2016年3月期间在PubMed数据库中进行了文献检索,使用了以下检索词:擦伤、肠、肠道、并发症、损伤、肠、腹腔内脓毒症/休克、穿孔、腰椎、脊柱、手术、内脏。诊断标准、结果、危险因素、手术方式及治疗策略是从检索结果中提取并用于综述的参数。文献中确认了31例肠损伤患者。在接受腰椎间盘切除术和显微椎间盘切除术的患者中,肠损伤更为常见(31例患者中有18例,占58.1%)。报告的病例中有10例(32.3%)为微创手术及涉及融合的外侧技术。最后,有2例(6.5%)与骶骨切除术相关,1例(3.2%)与后路融合加前纵韧带(ALL)松解相关。诊断主要依据急性腹痛的临床体征/症状、术后伤口感染、脓肿或肠皮肤瘘。术后肠损伤的显著危险因素包括复杂的手术解剖结构、既往腹部手术或感染病史、术前放疗、与手术技术相关的失误、缺乏手术经验以及器械故障。肠损伤的总体死亡率为12.9%(31例患者中有4例)。总体发病率为87.1%(31例患者中有27例)。根据我们对文献的综述,肠损伤与显著的发病率和死亡率相关。通过精心的术前规划可以预防。当发生肠损伤时,及时治疗可降低发病率和死亡率风险。