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Journal Article

Citation

Elghali MA, Ghrissi R, Fadhl H, Mahjoub M, Jarrar MS, Jedidi M, Letaief R, Hamila1 F. Int. Surg. 2021; 105(1-3): 129-133.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Minerva Medica)

DOI

10.9738/INTSURG-D-16-00204.1

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Ingestion of sharp objects is a rare event. We report our experience in the care of prisoners who ingested razor blades and the in-Time evolution of our management. This is a descriptive study including all detainees ingesting a razor blade, transferred from the prison to Farhat Hached University Hospital of Sousse, from January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2015. Thus, we counted 19 cases of swallowed razor blades in 16 prisoners; indeed, 1 prisoner ingested a razor blade three times and another had ingested a blade twice. Our study includes 19 episodes of swallowed razor blades. In 2 cases, these events were secondary to suicide attempts. In the other cases, it was an expression of discontent and rejection of the situation in the prison. Three patients had a psychiatric history. The mean age of the patients is 24 years. The initial clinical examination had not objectified signs of gastrointestinal perforation. Thoraco-Abdomino-pelvic computed tomography scans allowed specifying the blade location in all cases. It also objectified a pneumomediastinum in 2 cases. The blade location was esophageal in 1 case, gastric in 6 cases, and in the small bowel in the other cases. The first 4 patients had surgical removal of the blade. In subsequent cases, surgical abstention was the rule, and spontaneous blade expulsion was observed. The average time of expulsion was 4 days. In our experience, surgical removal of sharp foreign bodies should not be performed systematically without complications. © 2021 International College of Surgeons. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Surgery; Endoscopy; Ingestion; Foreign bodies; Razor blades

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