Transmesenteric small bowel herniation causing intestinal obstruction following laparoscopic transperitoneal nephrectomy

Publication date: August 2016 Source:Formosan Journal of Surgery, Volume 49, Issue 4 Author(s): Mohammed M. Hajhamad, Reynu Rajan, Nik R. Kosai, Badrulhisham Bahadzor In the field of urology, laparoscopic nephrectomy has become the most frequently performed laparoscopic procedure. Bowel-related complications are rare and predominantly ileus related. In addition, intestinal obstruction (IO) secondary to internal herniation is rarely documented. According to our review of the literature, only a few such cases have been reported worldwide. Here, we report a 72-year-old man with painless macroscopic hematuria. He was diagnosed with left renal cell carcinoma, and he subsequently underwent laparoscopic transperitoneal left radical nephrectomy. Two days following surgery, he developed acute IO. Computed tomography of the abdomen revealed dilated small bowel loops. Laparotomy revealed small bowel herniation via a sigmoid colon mesenteric defect. After reduction of the herniated bowel loops, the defect was closed using absorbable sutures. The patient was discharged 6 days later. Internal herniation is a rare cause of IO, accounting for < 3% of cases. It occurs due to creation of a transmesocolic defect during mobilization of the left colon, facilitating small bowel migration into a potential space in the renal bed. Generally, a meticulous dissection technique is used in such cases to avoid any unnecessary mesenteric tears and repair the evident mesenteric defects observed...
Source: Formosan Journal of Surgery - Category: Surgery Source Type: research
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