1.A new method for the removal of safety pins ingested by children.
Zafer TÜRKYILMAZ ; Ramazan KARABULUT ; Kaan SÖNMEZ ; Abdullah Can BASAKLAR ; Nuri KALE
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2007;36(3):206-207
INTRODUCTIONForeign body ingestion is a common problem in children. Safety pin ingestion is common in Turkey. We describe a new method of removal for safety pins in our 2 cases.
CLINICAL PICTUREA 9-month-old girl and a 6-month-old boy had each ingested a safety pin. Abdominal X-rays detected the safety pins in their stomachs. At the end of 3 months, the foreign bodies still remained in their stomachs and laparotomy was indicated.
TREATMENT AND OUTCOMEThis technique consists of a limited midline upper laparotomy with vertical incision. Without the utilisation of a gastrotomy, an orogastric tube was inserted into the stomach and the open end of the safety pin was pinned to the tube from outside the stomach. The orogastric tube was gently pulled out to remove the safety pin.
CONCLUSIONThis method provides shorter hospitalisation time and fewer complications.
Female ; Foreign Bodies ; surgery ; Humans ; Infant ; Laparotomy ; methods ; Length of Stay ; Stomach
2.Observations and experiences of pediatric surgeons working on the field in the first 7 days of the Kahramanmaraş earthquake
Alparslan KAPISIZ ; Cem KAYA ; Sibel ERYILMAZ ; Abdurrahman AZZAM ; Asli SEVIMLI ; Ramazan KARABULUT ; Zafer TURKYILMAZ ; Kaan SONMEZ
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2023;105(2):114-117
Purpose:
This study aims to share our experiences and problems, and to suggest solutions as pediatric surgeons who took part in the teams that went voluntarily to the region hit by the Kahramanmaraş earthquake during the first 7 days after the disaster.
Methods:
This study conveys our observations made at Kahramanmaraş Sütçüimam University Faculty of Medicine Hospital, where we worked as a volunteer team between February 7 and 14, 2023.
Results:
During the first few days, there were registration problems due to lack of electricity, water, and internet, as well as issues with sterile surgical environments. In the following days, a lack of auxiliary health personnel was revealed as the main difficulty.
Conclusion
Since coordination is important when working as a team in the aftermath of an earthquake, staff from the same center should be deployed together if possible, and a team leader should be selected. Alternative recording systems should be established in case of power outages and computer problems. Secretaries, auxiliary health staff, and technicians should be included in the team in addition to doctors and nurses.
3.New classification of Amyand’s hernia, our experience:a retrospective observational study with a literature review
Cem KAYA ; Alparslan KAPISIZ ; Ramazan KARABULUT ; Zafer TURKYILMAZ ; Sibel ERYILMAZ ; Merve Altin GULBURUN ; Kaan SONMEZ
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):237-244
Purpose:
Amyand’s hernia (AH) is the name given to the type of hernia in which the appendix is found in a hernial sac. We aimed to share our clinical experience with a literature review for AH.
Methods:
A total of 1,774 inguinal hernias and 13 AH cases were repaired in our clinic between 2009 and 2020. In addition, detailed clinical features about AH were extracted by including unpublished data of 165 cases, which were gathered from the extensive literature on childhood AHs using PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases.
Results:
The rate of AH was 0.73% in all inguinal hernias; this rate was 8.6% for incarcerated hernias. The average age was 5.74 ± 7.27 months for AH. Our AH cases were seen in males and on the right side. AH is seen in 97.3% of males according to a review of 69 articles. The average age was 16.78 ± 30.46 months. One hundred sixty-five of the AH cases were on the right (88.7%). The main symptoms were swelling or redness in the inguinal region, pain, fever, and vomiting, along with patients presenting septic or with stercoral fistula.
Conclusion
If the appendix is normal and easily reduced, high ligation is sufficient. In cases where reduction is difficult and/or the appendix is inflamed, appendectomy and hospitalization should be performed.
4.New classification of Amyand’s hernia, our experience:a retrospective observational study with a literature review
Cem KAYA ; Alparslan KAPISIZ ; Ramazan KARABULUT ; Zafer TURKYILMAZ ; Sibel ERYILMAZ ; Merve Altin GULBURUN ; Kaan SONMEZ
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):237-244
Purpose:
Amyand’s hernia (AH) is the name given to the type of hernia in which the appendix is found in a hernial sac. We aimed to share our clinical experience with a literature review for AH.
Methods:
A total of 1,774 inguinal hernias and 13 AH cases were repaired in our clinic between 2009 and 2020. In addition, detailed clinical features about AH were extracted by including unpublished data of 165 cases, which were gathered from the extensive literature on childhood AHs using PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases.
Results:
The rate of AH was 0.73% in all inguinal hernias; this rate was 8.6% for incarcerated hernias. The average age was 5.74 ± 7.27 months for AH. Our AH cases were seen in males and on the right side. AH is seen in 97.3% of males according to a review of 69 articles. The average age was 16.78 ± 30.46 months. One hundred sixty-five of the AH cases were on the right (88.7%). The main symptoms were swelling or redness in the inguinal region, pain, fever, and vomiting, along with patients presenting septic or with stercoral fistula.
Conclusion
If the appendix is normal and easily reduced, high ligation is sufficient. In cases where reduction is difficult and/or the appendix is inflamed, appendectomy and hospitalization should be performed.
5.New classification of Amyand’s hernia, our experience:a retrospective observational study with a literature review
Cem KAYA ; Alparslan KAPISIZ ; Ramazan KARABULUT ; Zafer TURKYILMAZ ; Sibel ERYILMAZ ; Merve Altin GULBURUN ; Kaan SONMEZ
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):237-244
Purpose:
Amyand’s hernia (AH) is the name given to the type of hernia in which the appendix is found in a hernial sac. We aimed to share our clinical experience with a literature review for AH.
Methods:
A total of 1,774 inguinal hernias and 13 AH cases were repaired in our clinic between 2009 and 2020. In addition, detailed clinical features about AH were extracted by including unpublished data of 165 cases, which were gathered from the extensive literature on childhood AHs using PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases.
Results:
The rate of AH was 0.73% in all inguinal hernias; this rate was 8.6% for incarcerated hernias. The average age was 5.74 ± 7.27 months for AH. Our AH cases were seen in males and on the right side. AH is seen in 97.3% of males according to a review of 69 articles. The average age was 16.78 ± 30.46 months. One hundred sixty-five of the AH cases were on the right (88.7%). The main symptoms were swelling or redness in the inguinal region, pain, fever, and vomiting, along with patients presenting septic or with stercoral fistula.
Conclusion
If the appendix is normal and easily reduced, high ligation is sufficient. In cases where reduction is difficult and/or the appendix is inflamed, appendectomy and hospitalization should be performed.
6.New classification of Amyand’s hernia, our experience:a retrospective observational study with a literature review
Cem KAYA ; Alparslan KAPISIZ ; Ramazan KARABULUT ; Zafer TURKYILMAZ ; Sibel ERYILMAZ ; Merve Altin GULBURUN ; Kaan SONMEZ
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):237-244
Purpose:
Amyand’s hernia (AH) is the name given to the type of hernia in which the appendix is found in a hernial sac. We aimed to share our clinical experience with a literature review for AH.
Methods:
A total of 1,774 inguinal hernias and 13 AH cases were repaired in our clinic between 2009 and 2020. In addition, detailed clinical features about AH were extracted by including unpublished data of 165 cases, which were gathered from the extensive literature on childhood AHs using PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases.
Results:
The rate of AH was 0.73% in all inguinal hernias; this rate was 8.6% for incarcerated hernias. The average age was 5.74 ± 7.27 months for AH. Our AH cases were seen in males and on the right side. AH is seen in 97.3% of males according to a review of 69 articles. The average age was 16.78 ± 30.46 months. One hundred sixty-five of the AH cases were on the right (88.7%). The main symptoms were swelling or redness in the inguinal region, pain, fever, and vomiting, along with patients presenting septic or with stercoral fistula.
Conclusion
If the appendix is normal and easily reduced, high ligation is sufficient. In cases where reduction is difficult and/or the appendix is inflamed, appendectomy and hospitalization should be performed.