| Literature DB >> 26269709 |
Massimo Sartelli1, Fikri M Abu-Zidan2, Luca Ansaloni3, Miklosh Bala4, Marcelo A Beltrán5, Walter L Biffl6, Fausto Catena7, Osvaldo Chiara8, Federico Coccolini3, Raul Coimbra9, Zaza Demetrashvili10, Demetrios Demetriades11, Jose J Diaz12, Salomone Di Saverio13, Gustavo P Fraga14, Wagih Ghnnam15, Ewen A Griffiths16, Sanjay Gupta17, Andreas Hecker18, Aleksandar Karamarkovic19, Victor Y Kong20, Reinhold Kafka-Ritsch21, Yoram Kluger22, Rifat Latifi23, Ari Leppaniemi24, Jae Gil Lee25, Michael McFarlane26, Sanjay Marwah27, Frederick A Moore28, Carlos A Ordonez29, Gerson Alves Pereira30, Haralds Plaudis31, Vishal G Shelat32, Jan Ulrych33, Sanoop K Zachariah34, Martin D Zielinski35, Maria Paula Garcia36, Ernest E Moore6.
Abstract
The open abdomen (OA) procedure is a significant surgical advance, as part of damage control techniques in severe abdominal trauma. Its application can be adapted to the advantage of patients with severe abdominal sepsis, however its precise role in these patients is still not clear. In severe abdominal sepsis the OA may allow early identification and draining of any residual infection, control any persistent source of infection, and remove more effectively infected or cytokine-loaded peritoneal fluid, preventing abdominal compartment syndrome and deferring definitive intervention and anastomosis until the patient is appropriately resuscitated and hemodynamically stable and thus better able to heal. However, the OA may require multiple returns to the operating room and may be associated with significant complications, including enteroatmospheric fistulas, loss of abdominal wall domain and large hernias. Surgeons should be aware of the pathophysiology of severe intra-abdominal sepsis and always keep in mind the option of using open abdomen to be able to use it in the right patient at the right time.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26269709 PMCID: PMC4534034 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-015-0032-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Advantages and disadvantages of different types of temporary abdominal closure (TAC) techniques
| Technique | Equipment | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin only closure | Skin staples, towel clips or sutures | Cheap, available, minimises heat and fluid loss | Damage to the skin, risk of evisceration, no control of fluid loss, incidence of ACS |
| ‘Bogota’ bag | Sterile 3 litre Saline bag cut and shaped and sutured to fascial edges | Cheap, available, minimises heat and fluid loss | Damage to the fascial edges, risk of evisceration, no control of fluid loss. Allows some assessment of intestinal viability. |
| Opsite Sandwich technique | Polyethylene sheet, Opsite dressings, abdominal packs, 2 suction drains and wall suction. | Cheap, available, minimises heat and fluid loss is controlled and measurable | Incomplete fluid control and need for available wall suction. |
| Absorbable mesh | Vicryl or similar MESH | Absorbable mesh, infection resistance, protects from evisceration, can be skin grafted. | High rate of subsequent incisional herniation |
| Non-absorbable mesh or commercial ‘Zipper’ | Commerical Whittman patch | Abdominal re-exploration is easy, maintains abdominal domain, gradual abdominal closure possible | Commercial equipment required and multiple trips to the operating theatre usually required for closure. |
| Vacuum Assisted Closure (VAC) | Commercial equipment | Prevents loss of abdominal domain, collects and monitors fluid loss, decreases ACS, no damage to skin or abdominal fascia. | Expensive commercial equipment required. Usually requires GA to change VAC system |