| Literature DB >> 28344917 |
Willemijn M Klein1, Mayke E Van der Putten2, Benno Kusters3, Bas H Verhoeven4.
Abstract
Placement of catheters, drains, shunts, and tubes in children can lead to serious or even fatal complications at the moment of placement, such as hemorrhage at insertion, or in the longterm, such as infections and migration into adjacent organs. The clinician should always be aware of these potential complications, especially if the child is unwell. For postmortem diagnostic evaluation, either with a computed tomography scan or an invasive autopsy, all tubes, drains, shunts, and/or catheters should be left in situ. We present three cases with fatal complications after the placement of a chest drain, ventriculoperitoneal shunt, and gastrostomy tube.Entities:
Keywords: chest drain; complications; feeding tube; unexpected death; ventriculoperitoneal shunt
Year: 2017 PMID: 28344917 PMCID: PMC5363334 DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1599795
Source DB: PubMed Journal: European J Pediatr Surg Rep ISSN: 2194-7619
Fig. 1Turkel Safety thoracentesis and paracentesis system of Covidien.
Fig. 2A male neonate with a corrected left-sided congenital diaphragmatic hernia. The right-sided chest drain was malpositioned through the mediastinum and caused a fatal hemorrhage. (A) The postmortem computed tomography and three-dimensional reconstruction shows the right-sided chest drain transversing the mediastinum (arrow). (B) The postmortem magnetic resonance imaging demonstrates the extensive intrapleural and intraperitoneal hemorrhage (arrows).
Fig. 3A 10-year-old girl with spina bifida aperta. The hydrocephalus was corrected with a ventriculoperitoneal shunt (VPS). The girl died after the shunt had migrated into the jejunum and had caused bowel ischemia, perforation, and peritonitis. The postmortem computed tomography(A) and the autopsy image (B) show the VPS in intraluminal jejunal location.
Fig. 4An 8-year-old girl died of peritonitis after malpositioning of a gastrostomy feeding tube into the peritoneal cavity. The postmortem computed tomography demonstrates the balloon of the MIC-KEY just outside the stomach (arrow).