Abstract

COVID-19 is a deadly multisystemic disease, and bowel ischemia, the most consequential gastrointestinal manifestation, remains poorly described. Our goal is to describe our institution's surgical experience with management of bowel ischemia due to COVID-19 infection over a one-year period. All patients admitted to our institution between March 2020 and March 2021 for treatment of COVID-19 infection and who underwent exploratory laparotomy with intra-operative confirmation of bowel ischemia were included. Data from the medical records were analyzed. Twenty patients were included. Eighty percent had a new or increasing vasopressor requirement, 70% had abdominal distension, and 50% had increased gastric residuals. Intra-operatively, ischemia affected the large bowel in 80% of cases, the small bowel in 60%, and both in 40%. Sixty five percent had an initial damage control laparotomy. Most of the resected bowel specimens had a characteristic appearance at the time of surgery, with a yellow discoloration, small areas of antimesenteric necrosis, and very sharp borders. Histologically, the bowel specimens frequently have fibrin thrombi in the small submucosal and mucosal blood vessels in areas of mucosal necrosis. Overall mortality in this cohort was 33%. Forty percent of patients had a thromboembolic complication overall with 88% of these developing a thromboembolic phenomenon despite being on prophylactic pre-operative anticoagulation. Bowel ischemia is a potentially lethal complication of COVID-19 infection with typical gross and histologic characteristics. Suspicious clinical features that should trigger surgical evaluation include a new or increasing vasopressor requirement, abdominal distension, and intolerance of gastric feeds.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 is a multisystemic disease[1] and the gastrointestinal tract is highly susceptible to infection with the virus[2] since the ACE2 receptor through which the SARSCoV-2 enters cells is highly expressed in the duodenum, jejunum, ileum, cecum, and the colon.[3]

  • There appears to be failure to distinguish bowel ischemia due to acute mesenteric thromboembolism from bowel ischemia that is due to COVID-19 infection.[8,9,10]

  • We describe our institution’s surgical experience with management of bowel ischemia due to COVID-19 infection over a one-year period

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 is a multisystemic disease[1] and the gastrointestinal tract is highly susceptible to infection with the virus[2] since the ACE2 receptor through which the SARSCoV-2 enters cells is highly expressed in the duodenum, jejunum, ileum, cecum, and the colon.[3]. The incidence of gastrointestinal symptoms in COVID-19 infection is as high as 61%.5. 45% of patients had gastrointestinal symptoms on admission.[6] we previously reported acute intestinal ischemia in COVID-19 infection,[6,7] the condition remains poorly described.[8] there appears to be failure to distinguish bowel ischemia due to acute mesenteric thromboembolism from bowel ischemia that is due to COVID-19 infection.[8,9,10]. COVID-19 is a deadly multisystemic disease, and bowel ischemia, the most consequential gastrointestinal manifestation, remains poorly described. Our goal is to describe our institution’s surgical experience with management of bowel ischemia due to COVID-19 infection over a one-year period

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