| Literature DB >> 32617147 |
Kentaro Shinohara1, Masahiko Suzuki1, Yutaro Asaba1, Takao Maeta1, Tomoyuki Ishida1, Yasunobu Mizukami1.
Abstract
An 81-year-old woman had undergone laparoscopic abdominoperineal resection for rectal cancer. A permanent colostomy was created through an intraperitoneal route. Three months after the surgery, the patient presented with lower abdominal pain and vomiting. Computed tomography showed gastric incarceration through the lateral space of the lifted sigmoid colostomy. Although the herniated stomach was reduced by nasogastric tube decompression, the patient experienced a recurrence of gastric hernia shortly thereafter. A laparoscopic operation was performed, and a new colostomy was constructed through an extraperitoneal route. The patient had no hernia recurrence during the 20 months of follow-up after the operation. Gastric internal hernia associated with colostomy can occur as a rare complication. Although reduction of the incarcerated stomach is possible by nasogastric tube decompression, surgical repair of the hernia may be the optimal management to prevent recurrence. Published by Oxford University Press and JSCR Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: abdominoperineal resection; gastric outlet obstruction; internal hernia; stoma-associated complication
Year: 2020 PMID: 32617147 PMCID: PMC7316439 DOI: 10.1093/jscr/rjaa124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2042-8812
Figure 1Contrast-enhanced computed tomography images of the gastric internal hernia. (a) The stomach is incarcerated through the lateral defect of the lifted sigmoid colostomy (arrow). (b) The stomach (arrowhead) is reduced after nasogastric tube decompression.
Figure 2Intraoperative findings of hernia repair. (a) The gastric incarceration is not evident in the lateral space of the sigmoid colostomy (arrow) at the time of exploration. (b) The colostomy is reestablished through an extraperitoneal route using the same stoma site.
Reported cases of internal hernia through the lateral space of the lifted sigmoid colostomy
| Reference | Age (years), sex | Primary surgery, stomal route | Interval | Herniated organ, condition | Treatment for hernia | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yokota | 70, M | Laparoscopic APR, extraperitoneal | 3 months | Small intestine, strangulated | Stoma revision with extraperitoneal route | Not available |
| Yokoyama | 56, M | Open APR, extraperitoneal | 9 days | Small intestine, strangulated | Direct suture repair | 21 months, no recurrence |
| Yasukawa | 70, M | Laparoscopic APR, intraperitoneal | 2 months | Small intestine, strangulated | Omental patch closure | Not available |
| Yasukawa | 75, M | Laparoscopic APR, intraperitoneal | 2 months | Small intestine, strangulated | No repair with reduction of the herniated intestine | 1 month, recurrence of hernia |
| Yasukawa | 83, M | Laparoscopic Hartmann’s operation, intraperitoneal | 15 months | Small intestine, strangulated | Stoma revision with intraperitoneal route | Not available |
| Present case | 81, W | Laparoscopic APR, intraperitoneal | 3 months | Stomach, not strangulated | Stoma revision with extraperitoneal route | 20 months, no recurrence |
M, man; W, woman; APR, abdominoperineal resection.
*Between primary surgery and hernia development.