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Journal Article

Citation

Tohda G, Sugawa C, Gayer C, Chino A, McGuire TW, Lucas CE. Surg. Endosc. 2008; 22(4): 1119-1125.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, Wayne State University, 6C-UHC, 4201 St. Antoine, Detroit, MI 48201, USA. genkipapa178@yahoo.co.jp

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00464-007-9620-2

PMID

17965918

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Caustic ingestion causes a wide spectrum of injuries; appropriate treatment varies according to the severity and extent of the injury. This retrospective study of adult patients with caustic injury presents the endoscopic findings, treatment regimen, and clinical outcome. METHODS: Over a 28-year period, 95 consecutive adult patients admitted to an urban emergency hospital for ingestion of caustic materials were studied. Each patient underwent early endoscopy and the injury was graded for severity. There were 61 men and 34 women with an average age of 37.2 years (range 17 to 81). Ingestion was due to a suicide attempt in 49 patients and accidental in 46 patients. RESULTS: Ten patients showed no mucosal damage. The remaining 85 patients had grade I superficial injury in 47 patients, grade II moderate injury in 25 patients, and deep grade III injury in 13 patients. The ingestion of strong acid or strong alkali often produced deep grade III changes while bleach, detergent, ammonia or other substances usually caused grade I injury. Operative interventions were required for 11 patients with grade III injury and 6 patients with grade II injury. Endoscopic grading was predictive for the onset of complications including late esophageal stricture. There were no complications due to endoscopy; one patient with grade III and multiple comorbidities died from multiple organ failure. CONCLUSION: Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy after caustic ingestion should be performed early to define the extent of injury and guide appropriate therapy. Grade I injuries heal spontaneously. Grade II injuries may be treated conservatively but repeat endoscopy helps define when intervention is needed. Grade III injuries ultimately require surgical intervention.


Language: en

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