Abstract

Background: Gastrointestinal tract (GIT) surgical emergencies represent a significant amount within surgical pathologies, in Africa and throughout the world. Our study was aimed to assess the etiological, therapeutic and prognostic aspects of GIT surgical emergencies in patients from two hospitals in Douala, Cameroon. Patients and Method: A longitudinal prospective study was conducted from December 2018 to May 2019, including 203 patients of all ages and both sexes who presented with a GIT surgical emergency in any clinical form, and who underwent surgery within one of our hospitals. We collected patients’ parameters through a survey, from complete history to clinical examination, then followed them up from surgery to post-operative time. Gathered information was analyzed by IBM Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS) 23.0 software version. Results: GIT surgical emergencies accounted for 27.5% of all surgical emergencies. Our target population included 55.2% (n = 112) of men, and 44.8% (n = 91) of women, observing a sex-ratio of 1.23. The mean age of the patients was 36.3 ± 17.1 years, with extreme values of 6 months and 86 years. Abdominal pain was the most common symptom, vomiting and lack of bowel movement or gas pass, were the main associated symptoms in 27.6% and 16.7% of cases, respectively. Etiologically, leading pathologies were intestinal obstruction (32.0%, 64 cases), acute appendicitis (24.6%, 50 cases), then came peritononitis and abdominal trauma with respectively 22.7% (46 cases) and 21.7% (43 cases). Most patients underwent surgery within 24 hour. Laparotomy was the primary method used in 90.6%, and laparoscopy (9.4%). Post-operative suture breakage and parietal suppuration were the most common complications post-operatively. Totally, the overall morbidity and mortality rates were respectively 8.9% and 0.98% among our patients. Conclusion: Acute surgical abdomens occupy an important place in surgical pathology because of their frequency. They have various aetiologies and require a diagnostic evaluation and multidisciplinary management without delay.

Highlights

  • Patients and Method: A longitudinal prospective study was conducted from December 2018 to May 2019, including 203 patients of all ages and both sexes who presented with a Gastrointestinal tract (GIT) surgical emergency in any clinical form, and who underwent surgery within one of our hospitals

  • Acute surgical abdomens occupy an important place in surgical pathology because of their frequency

  • Digestive surgical emergencies are abdominal ailments marked by pain that have developed for a few hours or a few days and which are related to surgical pathology, requiring urgent treatment [1]

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Summary

Introduction

Digestive surgical emergencies are abdominal ailments marked by pain that have developed for a few hours or a few days (less than three) and which are related to surgical pathology, requiring urgent treatment [1]. The main prognostic factor linked to digestive surgical emergencies as for today remains both diagnostic and therapeutic delay, maintaining post-operative mortality, and post-operative consequences grafted to high morbidity. It generally results from initial diagnostic errors, the precariousness of the technical platform, the low socioeconomic level of the patients, the lack of qualified personnel (anesthetists-resuscitators and surgeons) and the geographical accessibility of health structures [11]. Very few studies in Cameroon have been devoted to digestive surgical emergencies, in particular in Douala, a city that is predominantly demographically [14] This is why we have found it useful to conduct this study in order to improve our knowledge of this pathological entity, and its management in our country

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