Sundays Esophageal Case

kmattox at aol.com kmattox at aol.com
Tue Feb 6 12:28:29 GMT 2007


Almost impreceptiable very tiny leal is at the thoracic inlet.   Pt is asymptomatic with normal wbc and being fed via jejunostomy tube.    

K


Sent via BlackBerry, return via KMattox at aol.com
  

-----Original Message-----
From: Kenneth Rütz <rtz at dadlnet.dk>
Date: Tue, 06 Feb 2007 13:14:00 
To:trauma-list at trauma.org
Subject: Sundays Esophageal Case

Dear List and k

How is the patients condition at this state?
Where is the leak?
-If distal, one could try a coverd wall-stent in order to occlude the 
leak, limit the risk of further contamination, and to resume oral 
feding. NPO means there is still saliva going down, thus a need for 
closure even in spite of oral decontamination...
The stent could removed at a later stage, when the patient is fully 
recovered.

Kenneth Rütz
MD. Ph.D,
Senior Registrar, General Surgery
Svendborg, Denmark.
> Two weeks ago, I presented a case of GSW to innominate artery and  esophagus. 
>  He remained afebrile and with normal WBC.   On Day 10  he was fed and spiked 
> a little fever.  Esophageal swallow showed a LITTLE,  TINY leak, but he was 
> put NPO, a jejunostomy tube inserted and his fever  disappeared.   The 
> ultrasound of the neck showed NO expansion of the  hematoma .   Have NOT done an 
> arteriogram.    
>  
> So we are going to NOT feed him for a couple of weeks and repeat the  
> swallow, feeding him via jejunostomy.  
>  
> k
>   
--
trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG
To change your settings or unsubscribe visit:
http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html


More information about the trauma-list mailing list