Surgical Science

Volume 14, Issue 3 (March 2023)

ISSN Print: 2157-9407   ISSN Online: 2157-9415

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An Inahbitual Etiology of Acute Intestinal Obstruction: The Giant Fecalome

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DOI: 10.4236/ss.2023.143026    66 Downloads   365 Views  

ABSTRACT

The authors report an observation of a 20-year-old patient, who was referred by the medical emergency department for abdominal distention. The disease would have started with the appearance of abdominal pain, a stop of materials without stopping gases appeared gradually and evolving for 4 months. The patient was chronically constipated. She administered daily enemas with homemade products to have a bowel movement. She never had rectal bleeding, there was no alteration diarrhea—constipation. Mother of 3 children alive and apparently healthy. On clinical examination the abdomen was enlarged in size, painless but of firm consistency. The hernial orifices were free. Hard and abundant stools were noted on digital rectal examination. The abdominal CT scan revealed a large endorectal fecal impaction going up into the left colon, an absence of abdominal mass. We retained the diagnosis of giant fecal impaction. The patient was hospitalized and we instituted paraffin oil therapy combined with an evacuator enema with glycerin. The evolution was marked by a resumption of transit in the form of stool and gas (3 to 4 stools per day). At Day 8 of hospitalization the abdomen had decreased in volume the transit was regular and the patient was discharged on Day 10. Reviewed 3 months later, she maintained a regular transit made of one bowel movement a day. After a setback of 3 years the transit is still preserved. The authors discuss the etiologies of fecal impaction and their respective treatments.

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Ismaèl, L. , Mamadou, T. , Bernadette, N. , Serge, E. , Ezéchiel, A. , Amos, K. , Inza, B. , Bernadin, K. , Ibrahim, A. , Roger, L. and Bamourou, D. (2023) An Inahbitual Etiology of Acute Intestinal Obstruction: The Giant Fecalome. Surgical Science, 14, 225-230. doi: 10.4236/ss.2023.143026.

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