Year 2024 / Volume 116 / Number 7
Letter
Acute necrotizing pancreatitis secondary to a pancreatic foreign body

392-393

DOI: 10.17235/reed.2023.9868/2023

Melody Moreno Barrueco, Fernando Berdugo Hurtado, Concepción López Peña, María Cristina Bailon Gaona,

Abstract
Most ingested foreign bodies are passed along the gastrointestinal tract without complications. Only 1% result in complications, with sharp objects, such as fish bones, being the most frequently involved. One of the potential complications is mucosal perforation, which can reach solid organs such as the liver or pancreas in up to 1% of cases. CT is considered the most effective imaging test for detection and to rule out the presence of complications. Early management is a determining factor in prognosis, with laparoscopic and laparotomy removal being considered, although in recent years endoscopic removal has been gaining in importance.
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References
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Moreno Barrueco M, Berdugo Hurtado F, López Peña C, Bailon Gaona M. Acute necrotizing pancreatitis secondary to a pancreatic foreign body. 9868/2023


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Publication history

Received: 24/07/2023

Accepted: 31/07/2023

Online First: 14/09/2023

Published: 08/07/2024

Article Online First time: 52 days

Article editing time: 350 days


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