Title of article
Conservative management of gunshot oesophageal injuries: A report of two consecutive exceptional cases
Author/Authors
Virdis, Francesco Trauma Centre - Groote Schuur Hospital, South Africa , Chowdhury, Sharfuddin Trauma Centre - Groote Schuur Hospital, South Africa , Nicol, Andrew John Trauma Centre - Groote Schuur Hospital, South Africa , Navsaria, Pradeep Harkison Trauma Centre - Groote Schuur Hospital, South Africa
Pages
4
From page
144
To page
147
Abstract
Oesophageal trauma carries high mortality and morbidity. For penetrating intrathoracic oesophageal injury, surgical repair has been the standard for
decades to avoid its devastating consequences.
Case report: Both patients presented with a thoracoabdominal gunshot wound and retained intraabdominal missile. Although there were no visible signs of perfora-
tion on oesophagoscopy or contrast swallow, the presence of an intraluminal bullet highly suggested a thoracic oesophageal injury.
Discussion: Non-operative management of intrathoracic oesophageal perforation is controversial. Small perforations or contained leaks diagnosed within 24–48 h in a
stable patient with no mediastinitis or empyema can be managed non-operatively with antibiotics and nasogastric feeds. These two case reports support the notion of
selective non-operative management of asymptomatic patients with penetrating injury to the oesophagus.
Keywords
Penetrating trauma , Conservative management , Oesophageal injury
Journal title
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year
2016
Record number
2618210
Link To Document