Fatal vascular injury as a result of operations: Experience of two surgery-related autopsies. Legal medicine (Tokyo, Japan) [Leg Med (Tokyo)] Journal article | | Title | Fatal vascular injury as a result of operations: Experience of two surgery-related autopsies. | | Author(s) | Shigeta A, Hayashi K, Kikuchi Y, Kuroyanagi K, Kageyama N, Ro A, Takatsu A, Fukunaga T | | Institution | Tokyo Medical Examiner's Office, 4-21-18 Otsuka, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 112-0012, Japan. | | Source | Leg Med (Tokyo) 2009 Mar 31. | | Abstract | We experienced two autopsy cases of unexpected death during surgical operation. Case 1 was a 60-year-old male. Salvage esophagectomy was performed from the right side of the thrax. After dissection of the lymph node, blood pressure decreased suddenly. Emergency thoracotomy was done for diffuse hemothorax in the left thoracic cavity. The patient died despite aggressive hemostasis. Autopsy findings revealed that the operator dissected the left subclavian artery instead of the lymph nodes. Case 2 was a 60-year-old male with advanced thyroid cancer with pelvic metastasis. Surgical removal of the sacrum was attempted for pain relief. The operation was interrupted because of massive hemorrhage from the iliac veins. After the operation, the patient's left leg quickly became necrotic. Despite the bypass grafting from the right to the left femoral artery, the patient died of reperfusion injury. Autopsy revealed ligation of the left common iliac artery along with the accompanying vein. The leg necrosis was thought to have resulted from the vascular ligation. In these two cases, the demonstration and elucidation of the causes of deaths were required with medicolegal autopsies. However, it proved difficult to visualize the operated vessels in detail. In autopsy investigations related to surgical operations, detailed information of the clinical course is valuable and should be provided by the operators themselves, as well as being obtained from clinical charts. | | Language | ENG | | Pub Type(s) | JOURNAL ARTICLE
| | PubMed ID | 19342267 |
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