Percutaneous ultrasound-guided drainage of intra-abdominal abscesses
β Scribed by Dr. O. Goletti; P. V. Lippolis; M. Chiarugi; G. Ghiselli; F. De Negri2; M. Conte; T. Ceragioli; E. Cavina
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 475 KB
- Volume
- 80
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0007-1323
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
A retrospective review of 200 patients with intra-abdominal abscesses treated by percutaneous ultrasound-guided drainage is reported. Abscesses were simple in 151 patients (75.5 per cent) and complex in 49 (24.5 per cent). In 12 patients the abscess communicated with the gastrointestinal tract. There were 17 critically ill patients for whom percutaneous drainage was the only therapeutic option possible. The success rate was 94.7 per cent (143 of 151 patients) for simple abscess and 69 per cent (34 of 49) for complex abscess. The overall success rate was 88.5 per cent. The mortality rate was 1.3 per cent (two patients) for simple and 16 per cent (eight patients) for complex abscess. The overall mortality rate was 5.0 per cent. Percutaneous ultrasound-guided drainage should be the initial drainage procedure in patients with a simple abdominal abscess. The presence of a complex abscess should not prevent an attempt at percutaneous catheter drainage, particularly in high-risk patients, although the risk of failure is greater in such cases.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Objective: To assess the utility of a less invasive approach to the care of women with a pelvic abscess, we retrospectively reviewed the outcome of women with pelvic abscesses managed by transvaginal ultrasound-guided aspiration. Methods: A retrospective analysis of 27 pelvic abscesses in 22 consec
The most recent study published in the British Journal of Surgery demonstrated that over 90 per cent of patients were happy with the conservative approach', supporting an earlier study from Oxford\*. Our detailed study of the natural history of fibroadenoma has shown that few increase in size and th