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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 144 pull-through-operations performed for anorectal-atresia, following complications were observed: pneumonia 11%, sepsis 8.3%, peritonitis 5%, bowel obstruction 5%, osteomyelitis 1%, retraction of the pulled-through colon 4%, anal stenosis 16%, secondary megacolon 9%, fistula relapse 8%, mucosal prolapse 4%. Recto-urethral, recto-vesical- and recto-vaginal fistula relapses are managed by interposition of the gracile muscle. Anal stenoses and secondary megacolon are prevented by a sufficiently long postoperative bougienage.
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PMID:[Therapy of postoperative complications following abdominoperineal or abdominosacroperineal pull-through surgery in anal atresia]. 343 Dec 99

A retrospective analysis of 20 cases of orbital fistula in Shanghai showed the causes to be trauma with foreign-body retention, osteomyelitis, mucocele, and dermoid cyst. Half the patients were children younger than 10 years old. Cicatricial ectropion, ptosis, and extraocular motility disturbance constituted the common clinical findings. Treatment according to the various causes included surgical removal of the foreign body, oral administration of antibiotics combined with local irrigation, radical extraction of all the epithelium lining the fistula, and excision of the fistula.
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PMID:Orbital fistula. Causes and treatment of 20 cases. 663 28

A 65-year-old diabetic man with a history of otitis was admitted with headache, neck and shoulder pain and cranial nerve abnormalities including sixth, seventh and twelfth nerve palsies, hearing loss and ptosis. Lumbar puncture revealed an elevated CSF protein and pleocytosis. Imaging procedures demonstrated osteomyelitis of the clivus that involved the epidural space and extended within the prevertebral space to the cervical spine. The patient improved after treatment with antibiotics and immobilization of the neck. This case illustrates the importance of recognizing infections of the clivus in patients with cranial nerve abnormalities.
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PMID:Clivus and cervical spinal osteomyelitis with epidural abscess presenting with multiple cranial neuropathies. 758 56

A 34-year-old man developed fever, headache, nausea, double vision, exophthalmus, ptosis, disturbance of vision and oculomotor nerve palsy. Magnetic resonance imaging and cerebral angiography led to the clinical diagnoses of cavernous sinus thrombophlebitis and suspicion of bacterial aneurysm of the left internal carotid artery, respectively. Peptostreptococcus was detected in blood culture analysis. He died 15 days after admission. Systemic organs showed several septic changes. In particular, the bilateral cavernous sinuses were enlarged and showed severe neutrophilic leukocyte infiltration of the walls and organization, recanalization and abscesses in thrombi. In anterior to the middle cranial fossa, abscess-forming, necrotic, hemorrhagic meningitis, purulent sphenoid sinusitis, pyogenic osteomyelitis of the sphenoid bone, suppurative encephalitis, and inflammatory necrosis of the hypophysis were seen. Based on these findings, we diagnosed the patient with cavernous sinus thrombophlebitis caused by sphenoid sinusitis.
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PMID:Cavernous sinus thrombophlebitis caused by sphenoid sinusitis--report of autopsy case. 1143 Apr 92

Abdominal sacrocolpopexy is a standard surgical technique to repair apical vaginal prolapse. When approached laparoscopically, a uterus-preserving technique was suggested as potentially favorable for avoiding mesh-related complications. A 52-year-old Caucasian woman came to the emergency department with right-sided low back pain and vaginal discharge more than 1 year after undergoing a laparoscopic, uterus-preserving, cervicosacropexy with Mersilene (Ethicon Inc., Somerville, NJ) mesh and permanent Gore-Tex (W.L. Gore and Associates, Inc., Flagstaff, AZ) suture. Lumbar spine magnetic resonance imaging revealed diskitis and an epidural abscess at the L5 to S1 vertebral levels, and a fistulous tract was identified extending from the rectovaginal space to the affected vertebrae. The patient underwent a fine-needle aspiration of the epidural abscess and intravenous antibiotic therapy was started. However, because of a lack of symptom resolution she was taken to the operating department on hospital day 11 and underwent a total abdominal hysterectomy, left salpingectomy, right salpingo-oophorectomy, bilateral ureterolysis, and excision of an infected Mersilene mesh. Surgical findings were notable for 2 pinpoint areas in the upper vagina consistent with fistulae tracts communicating with the retroperitoneal space. The patient recovered well from her surgery, and was discharged to a rehabilitation facility. Vertebral osteomyelitis, with or without an epidural abscess, is a rare complication of sacrocolpopexy. The findings of this case suggest this complication likely occurred as a result of a permanent suture being placed entirely (or nearly entirely) through the vaginal mucosa resulting in fistulae formation, bacterial seeding of the Mersilene mesh, and subsequent osteomyelitis. This highlights the importance of mesh and suture selection, and determining the most appropriate sites for mesh attachment.
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PMID:Vertebral osteomyelitis and epidural abscess after laparoscopic uterus-preserving cervicosacropexy. 1843 15

We report on the transabdominal resection of infected lumbosacral bone, synthetic mesh, and sinus tract following sacral colpopexy. A 45-year-old nulliparous patient who had undergone transvaginal mesh followed by robot-assisted sacral colpopexy presented with increasing back pain and foul-smelling vaginal drainage. An epidural abscess required surgical intervention, including diskectomy, sacral debridement, and mesh removal to drain the abscess and vaginal sinus tract. Recognized complications of open prolapse procedures also manifest following minimally invasive approaches. Osteomyelitis of the sacral promontory following sacral colpopexy may require gynecologic and neurosurgical management.
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PMID:Lumbosacral osteomyelitis after robot-assisted total laparoscopic hysterectomy and sacral colpopexy. 2053 51

Granulicatella adiacens is a nutritionally variant streptococci. Only 3 cases of vertebral osteomyelitis due to these microorganisms have been reported. We experienced a 73-year-old male who consulted us due to fever and back pain of about 1-month duration. On examination, a presystolic murmur was heard in the apical region. Echocardiography showed prolapse of the mitral valve, but no vegetation was observed. MRI revealed osteomyelitis of lumbar vertebrae. As G. adiacens was detected in blood culture, it was determined as the cause of vertebral osteomyelitis, and combination antibiotics therapy was started. The condition improved, the patient underwent valvoplasty, and no trace of infective endocarditis was noted in the resected valve. All the previous cases had infection caused by G. adiacens and complicated with infective endocarditis. This is the first case without infective endocarditis. Vertebral osteomyelitis due to NVS is very rare. Since nutritionally variant streptococci do not grow in common culture media, and since the sensitivity of isolation by standard conventional biochemical methods is low, the condition may be misdiagnosed as blood-culture-negative vertebral osteomyelitis. Therefore, the possibility of nutritionally variant streptococci infection should be considered if a patient with vertebral osteomyelitis shows a positive Gram stain but negative blood cultures.
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PMID:Vertebral osteomyelitis associated with Granulicatella adiacens. 2131 41

We report a case of enterococcus lumbar osteomyelitis that developed after post-operative pyelonephritis. A 78-year-old G2P2 with Stage III uterovaginal prolapse and genuine stress urinary incontinence who underwent laparoscopic-assisted vaginal hysterectomy, high uterosacral ligament suspension, tension-free vaginal tape-obturator approach, and cystoscopy presented with post-operative back pain. Work-up of her back pain revealed enterococcus pyelonephritis. She continued to have back pain despite outpatient antibiotic treatment and further work-up revealed enterococcus lumbar osteomyelitis at the level of L1-L2. Enterococcus vertebral osteomyelitis is a rare infection that can occur by hematogenous spread from an infection of the urinary tract.
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PMID:Enterococcus osteomyelitis secondary to pyelonephritis. 2277 80

Diskitis after sacrocolpopexy for pelvic organ prolapse has been increasingly reported in the literature. We present a case of vesicosacrofistulization resulting in diskitis and osteomyelitis after robotically assisted laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy performed at an outside institution. A 70-year-old woman with uterovaginal prolapse and stress urinary incontinence underwent robotic supracervical hysterectomy with sacrocolpopexy and transobturator sling placement at an outside hospital. Postoperatively, she had recurrent urinary tract infections; by 3 months postoperatively, fevers and leg and back pain had developed. She was given a diagnosis of L5-S1 spondylodiskitis. After 3.5 weeks of intravenous antibiotic therapy failed, further evaluation revealed a fistulous tract to the sacrum. She was transferred to our institution and underwent sacrocolpopexy mesh removal, L5-S1 debridement, antibiotic treatment, and physical therapy. One year after this repair surgery, she has returned to her usual activities with no current symptoms of infection, prolapse, urinary incontinence, or back pain. Vesicosacrofistulization is a serious complication of sacrocolpopexy that can result in diskitis and osteomyelitis. Prevention involves avoiding placing mesh on the bladder and at the L5-S1 disk space during open or minimally invasive sacrocolpopexy. A high index of suspicion for diskitis, even several months after surgery, should be maintained to expedite evaluation. If fistulization of pelvic structures to the sacrum is suspected, a multidisciplinary evaluation and treatment approach should be considered to optimize patient care.
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PMID:Vesicosacrofistulization after robotically assisted laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy. 2476 62

Lemierre syndrome is a clinical syndrome that presents with internal jugular thrombophlebitis, septicemia and systemic abscess formations. In general, the condition is preceded by oropharyngeal infections. We report a case of a 73-year-old man with Lemierre syndrome, clivus osteomyelitis and a steroid-responsive mass in the cavernous sinus-suprasellar region. He complained of fever, occipital pain, diplopia and right ptosis. Administration of oral steroids ameliorated the ophthalmic symptoms for a period before he was admitted to our hospital. After admission, the severity of his headache advanced, and his ophthalmic symptoms progressed bilaterally. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed contrast enhancement of the clivus and revealed a mass lesion contrast-enhancement effect in the cavernous sinus-suprasellar region. Fusobacterium nucleatum was detected by blood culture, and computed tomography revealed multiple bacterial emboli in both lung fields and thrombosis of the left internal jugular vein; thus, he was diagnosed with Lemierre syndrome. After venous administration of antibiotics, his fever and headache markedly improved, but the ophthalmic symptoms did not. We prescribed an oral steroid because the cavernous sinus-suprasellar lesion was probably an inflammatory granuloma caused by a para-infectious mechanism rather than by infection. After the series of treatments, his ophthalmic symptoms improved, and the cavernous sinus-suprasellar region mass lesion decreased. He was eventually discharged in a fully ambulatory state and had no ophthalmic difficulties. We thought that the osteomyelitis of clivus was caused by Lemierre syndrome and its inflammatory processes formed the granuloma in the cavernous sinus-suprasellar region. This was a case of Lemierre syndrome with a rare combination of clivus osteomyelitis and a steroid-responsive tumour in the cavernous sinus-suprasellar region that was successfully treated.
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PMID:[A case of corticosteroid-responsive Lemierre syndrome with clivus osteomyelitis and a mass in the cavernous sinus-suprasellar region]. 2602 95


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