• Collegium antropologicum · Dec 2002

    War injuries of colon and rectum--results after 10 years.

    • Z Busić, F Rudman, I Stipancić, E Amić, and D Busić.
    • Department of Abdominal Surgery II, University Hospital Dubrava, Zagreb, Croatia.
    • Coll Antropol. 2002 Dec 1;26(2):441-6.

    AbstractThe aim of our study is to evaluate results of treating war injuries of colon and rectum, after 10 years. During the war in Croatia, 21 wounded, with colon (19) and rectum (2) injuries, were treated in the Department of Surgery at Nova Gradiska General Hospital from August 1991 to April 1992. Bullet wounds accounted for 57% of the injuries. All patients had other associated injuries. Primary repair and proximal derivation was possible in 2 cases (9.5%), while primary resection with intraperitoneal anastomosis was performed in 3 (14.3%) patients. In 2 (9.5%) patients sustained intraperitoneal and extraperitoneal rectal penetrating injury rectum was resected and closed performing temporary sigmoidostomy. When multiple perforations or crush injury of the colon were found, in 8 (38.1%) injured persons resection of the involved segment was combined with proximal end colostomy and aboral mucous fistula. Exteriorization of injured segment of the colon and creating colostomy incorporating the injured colon as the stoma was performed in 6 (28.5%) wounded patients. Four of the wounded (19.0%) died two of them during the operative procedure due to hemorrhagic shock. One injured died after eight days due to pulmonary embolism, and one patient died after thirty days due to sepsis. Reoperation was necessary in two (9.5%) injured due to bowel obstruction four days following initial surgery because of adhesions. Three (14.3%) of the injured had wound infection, one of them died 30 days after injury due to sepsis, and two (9.5%) consequently developed ventral hernia that was operated after 4 and 5 years respectively. Four (19.0%) of the injured are still occasionally experiencing occasional abdominal pain.

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