Getahun Abate, Mazumder Shirin, Vivek Kandanati
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO 63104, USA.
The Journal of emergency medicine 2013 FebMedical and surgical problems associated with rectal foreign bodies are rare. Although most rectal foreign bodies can be removed without subsequent sequelae, they pose significant risk of infection. We report a patient with a 32-cm rectosigmoid foreign body and subsequent development of Fournier gangrene despite successful removal of the foreign body. A 63-year-old Caucasian man with past medical history of diabetes mellitus and depression presented with a chief complaint of "something stuck in my intestine." He admitted that he placed a foreign body in the rectum. Abdominal X-ray study and computed tomography of the abdomen/pelvis showed a conical-shaped 32-cm rectosigmoid foreign body. The foreign body was removed manually and follow-up colonoscopy was done. The patient's condition deteriorated in the first 2 days of hospital stay and he was diagnosed with Fournier gangrene. He required multiple surgeries and received broad-spectrum antibiotic coverage for mixed bacterial flora grown from deep tissue. Rectal foreign bodies can cause Fournier gangrene. A close observation and follow-up is important after removal of rectal foreign bodies. Published by Elsevier Inc.
Getahun Abate, Mazumder Shirin, Vivek Kandanati. Fournier gangrene from a thirty-two-centimeter rectosigmoid foreign body. The Journal of emergency medicine. 2013 Feb;44(2):e247-9
PMID: 23200766
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