Cases reported "Wounds, Nonpenetrating"

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1/111. Aorto--bronchial fistula resulting from an accidental fall one year earlier.

    A 75-year-old woman presented with massive haemoptysis 12 months after tripping over her shopping trolley. CT scanning and transoesophageal echocardiography demonstrated a traumatic false aneurysm which was confirmed at surgery to be partially ruptured. Aortobronchial fistula is an unusual cause of massive haemoptysis. It should be considered particularly in patients known to have abnormalities of the thoracic aorta.
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ranking = 1
keywords = fistula
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2/111. Intrahepatic arterioportal fistula: gadolinium-enhanced 3D magnetic resonance angiography findings and angiographic embolization with steel coils.

    We describe a case of a 59-year-old patient with intrahepatic arterioportal fistula secondary to blunt trauma sustained by a motor vehicle accident 36 years earlier. The fistula was demonstrated 36 years after the accident in a clinical work-up for diarrhea of 1 month's duration, using contrast enhanced three-dimensional breath-hold MRA. A communication between the dilated portal vein and dilated hepatic artery was shown at the level of distal branches. After subsequent demonstration by conventional angiography, the fistula was embolized using steel coils. Following the therapeutic intervention, the patient's diarrhea ceased.
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ranking = 1.4
keywords = fistula
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3/111. Aortobronchial fistula after coarctation repair and blunt chest trauma.

    A 34-year-old man had development of an aortobronchial fistula 17 years after patch aortoplasty for correction of aortic coarctation and 5 years after blunt chest trauma, an unusual combination of predisposing factors. The clinical presentation, characterized by dysphonia and recurrent hemoptysis, and the surgical findings suggested the posttraumatic origin of the fistula, which was successfully managed by aortic resection and graft interposition under simple aortic cross-clamping, associated with partial pulmonary lobectomy. When hemoptysis occurs in a patient with a history of an aortic thoracic procedure, the presence of an aortobronchial fistula should be suspected. early diagnosis offers the only possibility of recovery through a lifesaving surgical procedure.
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ranking = 1.4
keywords = fistula
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4/111. A case of renal artery stenosis secondary to chronic pancreatitis.

    We report a case of renal artery stenosis most probably secondary to chronic pancreatitis. The patient had a traumatic pancreatic fistula. This was followed by numerous attacks of pancreatitis in the following years. At a relatively young age, he developed hypertension. Examinations revealed a right renal artery stenosis which was successfully treated by a percutaneous angioplasty. This rare complication should be kept in mind as a possible complication of pancreatitis.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = fistula
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5/111. Post-traumatic high flow priapism: a case report.

    A case of post-traumatic high flow priapism in a 32-year-old man is reported. The diagnosis was based on cavernous blood gas analysis and left internal pudendal arteriography. He was treated by unilateral super-selective embolization of the fistula with coils and gelatin sponge. At 1 month after embolization, erectile function had recovered, as demonstrated by measurement of nocturnal penile tumescence.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = fistula
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6/111. tracheoesophageal fistula after blunt chest trauma: successful diagnosis by computed tomography.

    A case of tracheoesophageal fistula after blunt trauma is reported. A 27-year-old man who suffered from an automobile traffic accident complained of strong choking after drinking water. Computed tomography demonstrated a defect between the esophagus and the trachea just above the carina. Acquired tracheoesophageal fistula was suspected and promptly confirmed by contrast esophagogram. The defects of the trachea and esophagus was repaired by primary suture and buttressed using a pedicled intercostal flap. The postoperative course was uneventful.
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ranking = 1.2
keywords = fistula
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7/111. Left hepatic duct injury and thoracobiliary fistula after abdominal blunt trauma.

    Thoracobiliary fistula after blunt hepatic trauma is rare. We report a case of pleurobiliary fistula after a blunt hepatic trauma leading to a left hepatic lobe laceration together with a left hepatic duct injury. The management of this traumatic lesion is discussed and related to the existing literature data. The diagnosis of traumatic thoracobiliary fistula rests upon clinical suspicion in the setting of a persistent right pleural effusion. Demonstration of the presence of bile in the pleural cavity by thoracocentesis is considered a proof of pleural biliary fistula. We think that laparotomy is an appropriate route for the treatment of pleurobiliary fistulas. However, when a bronchobiliary fistula is suspected, the patient should be treated with thoracotomy and may require pulmonary resection to remove the fistulous tracts.
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ranking = 439.69695451612
keywords = biliary fistula, fistula
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8/111. High-flow priapism: a novel way of lateralizing the lesion in radiologically inapparent cases.

    High-flow priapism is a rare entity, which is typically diagnosed with the help of either color flow Doppler ultrasound or arteriogram. In the case presented, both of these diagnostic modalities were unsuccessful in uncovering a vascular lesion. The patient underwent an empiric selective embolization of the left pudendal artery followed by a repeat angiogram of the right because of persistent tumescence. This procedure uncovered a previously unseen arteriolacunar fistula, which was treated successfully with a second selective embolization.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = fistula
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9/111. Fracture of the penis--diagnosis and management.

    Fracture of the penis is an uncommon injury, but it occurs most commonly during over enthusiastic sexual intercourse. Diagnosis is not difficult but serious complications such as urethral rupture and corporo-urethral fistula may occur. Management should be by early surgical exploration, with evacuation of the haematoma and repair of the tear in the tunica albuginea in order to minimize the length of patient's stay in hospital and avoid complications such as penile deformity and painful penile erections.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = fistula
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10/111. Post-traumatic high-flow priapism: management by superselective transcatheter autologous clot embolization and duplex sonography-guided compression.

    High-flow priapism is caused by uncontrolled arterial inflow into the penis, often from direct arterial trauma. We report a case of arterial or high-flow priapism that was treated with a combination of selective transcatheter autologous clot embolization and duplex sonography-guided compression therapy. Sonography showed a pulsatile, anechoic area at the base of the penis inside the left corpus cavernosum after blunt perineal trauma, and color Doppler examination revealed an arteriosinusoidal fistula. Autologous clot embolization was only partially successful, and 3 sessions of ultrasound-guided compression therapy were necessary to achieve complete thrombus formation in the fistulous tract, which became isoechoic a day after compression therapy.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = fistula
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