Postoperative multiple perforations of the small bowel in a patient with COVID-19 - case report

Vol. 65 No. 3, 2024

ROMANIAN JOURNAL of MORPHOLOGY and EMBRYOLOGY

Theodor Viorel Dumitrescu, Cristian Mesina, Mihai Calin Ciorbagiu, Luana-Corina Lascu, Sorina Octavia Hontaru, Nina Ionovici, Laurentiu Mogoanta, Stelian Stefanita Mogoanta

During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) presented quite a diverse symptomatology, in addition to respiratory symptoms, while other clinical signs such as thrombosis, postoperative hemorrhages, acute kidney or liver failure, digestive disorders (vomiting and diarrheal stools) were also reported. We present the case of a patient diagnosed with transverse colon neoplasm and asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, who presented to the Emergency Room (ER) of the Emergency County Clinical Hospital, Craiova, Romania, with a clinical picture of low intestinal occlusion. Surgery was decided and a right hemicolectomy extended to the left, with terminal ileostomy performed. The postoperative evolution was favorable, with the resumption of intestinal transit and discharge on the third postoperative day. The patient returned to the ER Department on the fifth day after surgery, with diffuse abdominal pain, absence of intestinal transit and flatulence. Clinical examination of the abdomen revealed the presence of bloating sounds on palpation. Emergency laparotomy was again performed with the suspicion of postoperative occlusion and five perforations were found in the small bowel, associated with fecaloid peritonitis and mechanic-inflammatory occlusion. The perforations were without any obvious lesion substrate, four of them being located on the jejunum and one on the terminal ileum. The histopathological examination revealed hemorrhage and recent transmural thrombosis on the intestinal wall, most likely caused by COVID-19. Without any respiratory symptoms, the COVID-19 infection caused multiple intestinal lesions, leading to peritonitis and septic shock, followed by the patient s death.

Corresponding author: Laurentiu Mogoanta, Professor, MD, PhD; e-mail: laurentiu_mogoanta@yahoo.com

DOI: 10.47162/RJME.65.3.16 Download PDF
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