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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Acute surgical abdomen during the COVID‑19 pandemic: Clinical and therapeutic challenges

Cristinel Dumitru BadiuDan DumitrescuCiprian TanasescuBogdan SoceaCorneliu TudorRadu Iulian SpataruSimona Andreea BalasescuAndra Maria TroteaGeta VanceaAna Maria DascaluDragos Serban

subject

0301 basic medicineCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyAbdominal painbusiness.industryGeneral surgeryPerforation (oil well)PeritonitisRetrospective cohort studyArticlesGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseAsepsis03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureImmunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)Acute abdomen030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPandemicmedicineAbdomenmedicine.symptombusiness

description

The present study investigated the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the clinical presentation and therapeutic management of acute surgical abdomen. A retrospective study of emergency hospitalizations with a diagnosis of acute surgical abdomen between April and July 2020 vs. a similar period in 2019 was performed. The observation sheets and the operating protocols were analyzed. Between April and July 2020, 50 cases of acute surgical abdomen were hospitalized and treated, compared to 43 cases in the same period last year. The main types of pathology in both groups included: Occlusions (60%, respectively 44.2% in 2019) and peritonitis (32%, respectively 41.8% in 2019). There was an increased rate of patients with colorectal cancers neglected therapeutically or uninvestigated, who presented during the pandemic period with emergencies for complications such as occlusion or tumor perforation (32 vs. 6.97%, P=0.0039). One case, with gastric perforation, was COVID-positive, with no pulmonary symptoms at admission. The number of postoperative infectious complications was lower during the pandemic (2 vs. 13.95%, P=0.0461). As the COVID-19 pandemic appears to be still far from ending, we should learn to adapt our surgical protocols to the new evidence. Oncological patients are a vulnerable group, who were neglected in the first months of the pandemic. SARS-Cov-2 infection may be a cause of abdominal pain and should be taken into account in different diagnoses of acute abdomen in surgical wards. Correct wearing of adequate personal protective equipment (PPE) and respecting strict rules of asepsis and antisepsis are required for preventing in-hospital transmission of infection.

https://doi.org/10.3892/etm.2021.9950