| Literature DB >> 28861738 |
Shuntaro Yoshimura1, Kazuhiko Mori1,2, Koichiro Kawasaki1, Asami Tanabe1, Susumu Aikou1, Koichi Yagi1, Masato Nishida1, Hiroharu Yamashita1, Sachiyo Nomura1, Masayoshi Fukushima3, Hideomi Yamashita4, Yasuhiro Yamauchi5, Yasuyuki Seto6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stereotactic body radiotherapy has been a treatment choice for lung cancer, especially in medically inoperable patients. However, the acute and late toxicity to adjacent organs have been reported as an uncommon but severe adverse effect. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Esophageal perforation; Nontransthoracic esophagectomy; Spondylodiscitis; Stereotactic body radiotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28861738 PMCID: PMC5578948 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-017-0368-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Blood examination on admission
| WBC | 13,200/μl | AST | 16 U/L |
|---|---|---|---|
| RBC | 445 × 10 4 /μl | ALT | 18 U/L |
| Hb | 13.8 g/dl | BUN | 17.0 mg/dl |
| Ht | 41.90% | Cre | 1.03 mg/dl |
| Plt | 39.8 × 104/μl | Na | 140 mEq/L |
| CRP | 29.9 mg/dl | K | 3.6 mEq/L |
Fig. 1Endoscopy revealed an esophageal perforation in the left side of the upper thoracic esophagus
Fig. 2Contrast-enhanced chest CT scan suggested the perforation of the esophagus in the upper left lateral wall with fluid and air in the posterior mediastinum. Osteolytic changes with free air space were observed within the vertebral body
Fig. 3MRI at the onset of paraplegia showed the destructions of the Th2–3 vertebral bodies (arrow) and the intervertebral disc accompanying epidural abscess (circled high intensity area) compressing the spinal cord at the level of Th2–3
Fig. 4Laminectomy of Th2–3 was performed. Osteolytic change was observed in the Th2–3 vertebral bodies
Fig. 5Schematic illustrations of the two-stage operation. a Subtotal esophagectomy was performed in the first stage operation with the combination of transcervical and transhiatal approaches. Dashed arrow, cervical skin incision; double lines, oral and anal margins of the esophagectomy; black dot, the location of the esophageal perforation. b Status after the first stage operation. Cervical esophagostomy was placed in the left side of the patient’s neck and a 19-Fr drainage tube (dotted thick line) was placed via the left side of the patient’s neck into the upper mediastinum. c Status after the second stage operation. Gastric conduit was lifted via a subcutaneous route, and an esophago-gastric anastomosis was performed. A 19-Fr drainage tube (dotted thick line) was placed behind the anastomosis via the left side of the patient’s neck