Intra-abdominal Gossypiboma Revisited: Various Clinical Presentations and Treatments of this Potential Complication

Indian J Surg. 2015 Dec;77(Suppl 3):1295-300. doi: 10.1007/s12262-015-1280-1. Epub 2015 May 20.

Abstract

Gossypiboma is the term used to describe a retained non-absorbable surgical material that is composed of cotton matrix which leads to serious surgical complications for both patient and surgeon. Its incidence is not precisely known probably due to medico-legal importance of this potential complication. The condition may manifest either as asymptomatic or severe gastrointestinal complications. The increasing number of recent reports in the literature implies that this issue still remains as an important problem to be solved after intra-abdominal surgery. In this report, we aimed to emphasize this potential complication by presenting the clinical outcomes of our 14 patients who underwent different surgical interventions for gossypiboma. Between February 2009 and October 2014, a total of 14 patients who underwent surgery for gossypiboma were reviewed retrospectively. The patients were analyzed with regard to demographic characteristics, initial diagnosis-prior surgery, clinical presentation, the interval period from the first operation to last definite operation, diagnostic methods, gossypiboma location, definite surgery, and postoperative outcomes. A total of 14 patients including 6 (42.9 %) male and 8 (57.1 %) female with a median age of 41.4 ± 12 years (22-61 years) enrolled in this study. The prior surgery of 10 (71.4 %) patients was performed by general surgeons, while 4 (28.6 %) patients were operated by gynecologists. The interval period from prior surgery to definite surgery ranged from 14 days to 113 months. Three (21.4 %) patients were asymptomatic, whereas the vast of the patients were complicated (fistula, ileus, wound infection). Gossypiboma was removed by open surgery, laparoscopic surgery, and endoscopic intervention in 10, 2, and 1 patient, respectively. Removal was performed from perineal wound side in one patient. Removal was enough for definitive treatment in 10 (71.4 %) patients whereas bowel resection and primary repair was performed in 4 (28.6 %) patients due to fistula or perforation. One patient died from intra-abdominal sepsis on postoperative 13th day. Gossypiboma should strongly be considered in differential diagnosis of any postoperative patient with mild gastrointestinal symptom or with persistent wound infection. Adequate surgical intervention should be planned as soon as possible either to prevent further complications or to overcome medico-legal problems, when gossypiboma is detected.

Keywords: Gossypiboma; Intraluminal migration; Retained surgical sponge; Surgery.