| Literature DB >> 33976761 |
Ahlam Hamed Alharbi1, Abdularahman M Alotaibi2.
Abstract
Enterocutaneous fistula (ECF) is a distressing complication. Commonly, it follows abdominal operations that require extensive adhesiolysis. Its management is challenging, burdening health systems. Complete healing can take several weeks. Several modalities have been described, with varying success rates. A 48-year-old male underwent a trauma laparotomy, with resection of a segment of the proximal bowel and anastomosis. He experienced an anastomosis leak, wound infection and ECF and was managed conservatively for 5 weeks with parenteral nutrition and bowel rest. He was then referred to us and treated with approximation sutures and cyanoacrylate adhesive. His wound was closed with a subcutaneous drain. He experienced complete healing of the fistula and wound after undergoing a minimally invasive approach using sutures and a cyanoacrylate sealant. Cyanoacrylate glue is a safe initial non-invasive treatment of low-output ECF. It can be selected over approximation sutures to ensure sealing of the tract before surgery. Published by Oxford University Press and JSCR Publishing Ltd.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33976761 PMCID: PMC8099472 DOI: 10.1093/jscr/rjab165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2042-8812
Figure 1Pre-intervention.
Figure 2Post-closure.
Review of some studies and reported cases of ECF with a brief description of methods of treatment and healing rates.
| Study (author), year | Number of cases | Type of treatment | Success rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sarfeh | 9 fistulae | Extraperitoneal closure with skin-graft coverage | 5/9 healed |
| Hwang and Chen | 6 | Fibrin glue | Healed within 4 days |
| Girard | Case report | Acellular dermal matrix with fibrin glue | Output stopped completely |
| Lisle | Three cases of ECF | Radiologically guided embolization with Gelfoam | 100% total occlusion in the 2-year follow-up |
| Ramón Rábago 2006[ | 30 patients with gastrointestinal fistulae (21 external) | Endoscopic injection of 4–8 mL of reconstituted fibrin glue (Tissucol® 2.0) on a weekly basis | Complete sealing of fistulae in 75% |
| Jamshidi | 7 fistulae (6 years review) | Application of biological dressings | 43% achieved fistula closure solely with biological dressings |
| Lippert | 52 fistulae | Endoscopic treatment, including fibrin glue (Tissucol Duo S®, Baxter, Unterschleissheim, Germany). | 55.7% cured (combined endoscopic treatment) |
| Avalos-González | Nonrandomized prospective case–control study | Direct percutaneous application of fibrin glue | Closure-time for the study group was 12.5 ± 14.2 d and 32.5 ± 17.9 d for the control group |
| Wu | Nonrandomized cohort study, 75 patients with low-output ECF | PRFG | 77% success rate |
| López | Systematic review, 14 studies | Cyanoacrylate embolization | Ranged from 57 to 100% among studies |
| Araujo-Míguez | Case report | Endoscopic treatment with biological fibrin glue (Tissucol Duo; Baxter). | Complete closure |
| Mauri | 18 | Injection of (Glubran 2) cyanoacrylic glue and ethiodized oil mixture at the site of the fistula | 89% |
| Musa | Case report | Percutaneous injection of cyanoacrylic sealant | Complete closure |
| Hsu | Case report | Hypertonic saline injection within the mucosa and use of fibrin glue as an adhesive | Complete closure |
| Nasralla | Case report | Percutaneous embolization using cyanoacrylate glue/ethiodized oil mixture | Complete closure |