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The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting

Introduction AL is known to be associated with increased morbidity and mortality. There are no studies reporting AL rate in sub-Saharan Africa. Methods A prospective multicentre snapshot study of 145 patients across the Cape Metro West healthcare platform was performed from 01/09/2020 to 31/12/2020....

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Main Author: Karimbocus, Mohammad
Other Authors: Boutall, Adam
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Karimbocus, Mohammad
author2 Boutall, Adam
author_browse Boutall, Adam
Karimbocus, Mohammad
author_facet Boutall, Adam
Karimbocus, Mohammad
author_sort Karimbocus, Mohammad
collection Thesis
description Introduction AL is known to be associated with increased morbidity and mortality. There are no studies reporting AL rate in sub-Saharan Africa. Methods A prospective multicentre snapshot study of 145 patients across the Cape Metro West healthcare platform was performed from 01/09/2020 to 31/12/2020. The study included all patients who had one or more intestinal anastomoses beyond the ligament of Treitz and excluded patients under 18 and patients undergoing simple appendectomies. Leaks were diagnosed clinically, radiologically or at relook laparotomy, outcomes and 30-day mortality were recorded. Results 102 males and 43 females were recruited, with a mean age of 41.9 years. 35 elective and 110 emergency procedures were performed. 120 patients had an uneventful postoperative course. 25 patients were investigated for AL and 15 leaks were confirmed. The overall leak rate was 10.3%, the leak rate for elective procedures was 8.6% and 10.9% for emergency procedures. 4 patients were diagnosed clinically, 4 were diagnosed at relaparotomy while 7 were found to have leaks on CT scans. 7 patients with AL needed a stoma, 1 needed a percutaneous drain, and 6 were treated conservatively. There were 3 deaths (overall mortality rate 2.07%), 1 in the AL group (mortality rate 6.67%), and 2 in the patients with no AL (1.54%). Conclusion This is the first study to look at AL in South Africa and it illustrates surgical practice across the entire healthcare platform. Anastomoses were performed safely in our healthcare service with a leak rate comparable to previous international studies.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:59.318Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38028 The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting Karimbocus, Mohammad Boutall, Adam Surgery Introduction AL is known to be associated with increased morbidity and mortality. There are no studies reporting AL rate in sub-Saharan Africa. Methods A prospective multicentre snapshot study of 145 patients across the Cape Metro West healthcare platform was performed from 01/09/2020 to 31/12/2020. The study included all patients who had one or more intestinal anastomoses beyond the ligament of Treitz and excluded patients under 18 and patients undergoing simple appendectomies. Leaks were diagnosed clinically, radiologically or at relook laparotomy, outcomes and 30-day mortality were recorded. Results 102 males and 43 females were recruited, with a mean age of 41.9 years. 35 elective and 110 emergency procedures were performed. 120 patients had an uneventful postoperative course. 25 patients were investigated for AL and 15 leaks were confirmed. The overall leak rate was 10.3%, the leak rate for elective procedures was 8.6% and 10.9% for emergency procedures. 4 patients were diagnosed clinically, 4 were diagnosed at relaparotomy while 7 were found to have leaks on CT scans. 7 patients with AL needed a stoma, 1 needed a percutaneous drain, and 6 were treated conservatively. There were 3 deaths (overall mortality rate 2.07%), 1 in the AL group (mortality rate 6.67%), and 2 in the patients with no AL (1.54%). Conclusion This is the first study to look at AL in South Africa and it illustrates surgical practice across the entire healthcare platform. Anastomoses were performed safely in our healthcare service with a leak rate comparable to previous international studies. 2023-07-06T06:50:03Z 2023-07-06T06:50:03Z 2023 2023-07-06T06:49:33Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38028 eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Surgery
Karimbocus, Mohammad
The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting
title_full The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting
title_fullStr The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting
title_full_unstemmed The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting
title_short The Incidence of Anastomotic Leaks in a South African Healthcare Setting
title_sort incidence of anastomotic leaks in a south african healthcare setting
topic Surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38028
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