| Literature DB >> 31579172 |
Meenakshi Gothwal1, Mahaveer Rodha2, Binit Surekha3, Pratibha Singh1, Garima Yadav1, Priyanka Sethi4.
Abstract
Gossypiboma is an uncommon but avoidable condition, which is mostly asymptomatic initially and difficult to diagnose but can cause serious postoperative complications. It is a mass lesion due to surgical sponge or swab if retained in the body after the surgery. Gossypiboma has a vague presentation, and it is difficult to diagnose. In patients with a prior history of surgery having soft-tissue masses or localized pain abdomen, gossypiboma should be included in the differential diagnosis. We are reporting a case of a 33-year-old woman referred to our center with a complaint of vague abdominal pain, mild distension for the past 7 days, and discharge from the stitch line for the past 1 day. After investigation, diagnosis of gossypiboma was made and an exploratory laparotomy was performed to remove the retained surgical mop. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: A surgical sponge; gossypiboma; retained foreign bodies
Year: 2019 PMID: 31579172 PMCID: PMC6767963 DOI: 10.4103/jmh.JMH_105_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Midlife Health
Figure 1(a) Abdominal radiograph showing linear radiopaque foreign body (black arrows) in the right side of upper abdomen (b) ultrasound showing collection with internal echoes (arrowhead) and echogenic foreign body (white arrows) within the collection
Figure 2(a) Coronal reformatted contrast-enhanced computed tomography images reveal gossypiboma lesion as a collection with mottled air specks (arrows) and hyperdense serpiginous structure. (b) Sagittal computed tomography scan showing hypodense linear tract (arrowhead) extending along the incision site
Figure 3(a) Intraoperative picture showing the retained surgical sponge being removed from the abdomen (arrows). (b) Picture of the resected specimen along with the retained sponge