• J. Gastrointest. Surg. · Mar 2010

    Management algorithm for pneumatosis intestinalis and portal venous gas: treatment and outcome of 88 consecutive cases.

    • Erik Wayne, Matthew Ough, Andrew Wu, Junlin Liao, K J Andresen, David Kuehn, and Neal Wilkinson.
    • Department of Surgery, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40202, USA.
    • J. Gastrointest. Surg. 2010 Mar 1;14(3):437-48.

    BackgroundPneumatosis intestinalis (PI) and portal venous gas (PVG) historically mandated laparotomy due to the high mortality rate associated with mesenteric ischemia. Computed tomography (CT) can identify PI/PVG in patients with ischemic emergencies and benign idiopathic conditions.MethodsA consecutive series of patients with PI or PVG was reviewed from a single institution over 5 years. Eighty-eight cases of PI/PVG were studied: 74 initial patients (year 1-4) were used to generate a treatment algorithm and fourteen additional cases were used to test the algorithm.ResultsPI and PVG were associated with three major clinical subgroups: mechanical causes (n=29), acute mesenteric ischemia (n=29), and benign idiopathic (n=26); four were unclassifiable. Patients with acute mesenteric ischemia were associated with abdominal pain (p=0.01), elevated lactate (>or=3.0 mg/dL; p=0.006), small bowel PI (p=0.04), and calculated vascular disease score (p<0.0005). The three subgroups could be distinguished using the generated algorithm with a sensitivity of 89%, specificity of 100%, and positive predictive value of 100%.ConclusionsWith greater sensitivity of modern CT scans, PI and PVG are being detected in patients with a wide range of surgical and non-surgical conditions. This clinical algorithm can identify subgroups to direct surgical intervention for acute ischemic insults and prevent non-therapeutic laparotomies for benign idiopathic PI and PVG.

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