Transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report

Abstract Background A retained surgical sponge remains a dreaded complication of modern surgery. Despite the increasing focus on patient safety instances of “a sponge being left in the abdomen”, are all too common in popular media. In this article we report the rare phenomenon of transmigration of a...

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Main Authors: Tushar Patial, Namit Rathore, Angesh Thakur, Digvijay Thakur, Kanika Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-08-01
Series:Patient Safety in Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-018-0168-y
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spelling doaj-3fd5943b8bb0452bb85baeea004004ca2020-11-25T02:06:29ZengBMCPatient Safety in Surgery1754-94932018-08-011211410.1186/s13037-018-0168-yTransmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case reportTushar Patial0Namit Rathore1Angesh Thakur2Digvijay Thakur3Kanika Sharma4The ClinicDepartment of General Surgery, Indira Gandhi Medical CollegeDepartment of Urology, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and ResearchDepartment of General Surgery, Indira Gandhi Medical CollegeDepartment of Radiation Therapy, Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Hospital and Research CentreAbstract Background A retained surgical sponge remains a dreaded complication of modern surgery. Despite the increasing focus on patient safety instances of “a sponge being left in the abdomen”, are all too common in popular media. In this article we report the rare phenomenon of transmigration of a retained surgical sponge in a patient who underwent laparoscopic sterilization. Case presentation A 30-year-old female presented with progressive abdominal pain for about one month and vomiting with obstipation for 2 days. The patient had undergone laparoscopic sterilization 7 years back and then underwent re-canalization one year back. She underwent an exploratory laparotomy for suspected adhesive small bowel obstruction. During surgery, an intra-luminal surgical sponge was recovered from the distal small bowel. The patient recovered and was discharged in good health. Conclusion Despite numerous advances in terms of technology and the ever-growing emphasis on patient safety, the problem of a retained surgical sponge remains a dreaded potential complication. All clinicians and health care professionals should be aware of this entity and its various presentations.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-018-0168-yGossypibomaTextilomaRetained surgical itemsRetained surgical spongeCase report
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tushar Patial
Namit Rathore
Angesh Thakur
Digvijay Thakur
Kanika Sharma
spellingShingle Tushar Patial
Namit Rathore
Angesh Thakur
Digvijay Thakur
Kanika Sharma
Transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report
Patient Safety in Surgery
Gossypiboma
Textiloma
Retained surgical items
Retained surgical sponge
Case report
author_facet Tushar Patial
Namit Rathore
Angesh Thakur
Digvijay Thakur
Kanika Sharma
author_sort Tushar Patial
title Transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report
title_short Transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report
title_full Transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report
title_fullStr Transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report
title_full_unstemmed Transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report
title_sort transmigration of a retained surgical sponge: a case report
publisher BMC
series Patient Safety in Surgery
issn 1754-9493
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Abstract Background A retained surgical sponge remains a dreaded complication of modern surgery. Despite the increasing focus on patient safety instances of “a sponge being left in the abdomen”, are all too common in popular media. In this article we report the rare phenomenon of transmigration of a retained surgical sponge in a patient who underwent laparoscopic sterilization. Case presentation A 30-year-old female presented with progressive abdominal pain for about one month and vomiting with obstipation for 2 days. The patient had undergone laparoscopic sterilization 7 years back and then underwent re-canalization one year back. She underwent an exploratory laparotomy for suspected adhesive small bowel obstruction. During surgery, an intra-luminal surgical sponge was recovered from the distal small bowel. The patient recovered and was discharged in good health. Conclusion Despite numerous advances in terms of technology and the ever-growing emphasis on patient safety, the problem of a retained surgical sponge remains a dreaded potential complication. All clinicians and health care professionals should be aware of this entity and its various presentations.
topic Gossypiboma
Textiloma
Retained surgical items
Retained surgical sponge
Case report
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-018-0168-y
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AT angeshthakur transmigrationofaretainedsurgicalspongeacasereport
AT digvijaythakur transmigrationofaretainedsurgicalspongeacasereport
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