In this study, we identified the risk factors for bowel necrosis in patients with HPVG and created new diagnostic criteria with high sensitivity and accuracy. These criteria consist of three factors that can be easily assessed by physicians in the emergency department and help establish whether unstable patients who complain of acute abdominal pain have bowel necrosis.
The number of cases of HPVG treated conservatively has been increasing rapidly; however, few reports have addressed the factors that indicate bowel necrosis and no consensus has been reached. MDCT has become the first choice for HPVG detection and evaluation of the underlying process [6]. CT scans are more sensitive than plain radiographs for depicting small amounts of HPVG [7]. Wiesner et al. [8] reported that contrast-enhanced CT was a powerful investigatory tool to differentiate HPVG with acute mesenteric ischemia from non ischemic pathology.
Reports of intestinal pneumatosis have also been increasing [8–13]. Wiesner et al. [9] stated that band-like pneumatosis and the combination of pneumatosis and portomesenteric venous gas on CT are highly associated with transmural bowel infarction. DuBose et al. [10] conducted a retrospective multicenter study of 500 patients with pneumatosis intestinalis and reported that a lactate value of 2.0 or greater and hypotension/vasopressor use was associated with a predictive probability of 93.2 % of pathologic pneumatosis defined as confirmed transmural ischemia. Moreover, the reported specificities of pneumatosis and portal venous gas for acute bowel ischemia usually approach 100 % [8]. In contrast, according to some reports, intestinal pneumatosis is not useful for diagnosing the severity of HPVG [11]. Furthermore, neither pneumatosis nor portomesenteric venous gas is absolutely specific for transmural bowel wall necrosis in acute bowel ischemia, since the CT findings of both disorders may be observed in patients with only partial mural or even superficial mucosal and submucosal bowel ischemia, which are typically not associated with the same unfavorable clinical outcome [9]. The present study confirmed that intestinal pneumatosis is a significant independent risk factor for bowel necrosis.
Unexpected metabolic acidosis, as well as symptoms such as abdominal pain and peritoneal irritation, is indicative of mesenteric ischemia [6]. Another study suggested that increased lactate levels with anion gaps and/or CT findings suggestive of an ischemic bowel are indications for emergency laparotomy (“aggressive management”) [14]. Our findings are not in line with those of the aforementioned reports, which used different modalities to detect HPVG, evaluated a smaller sample size, comprised different articles (such as case reports and reviews), and did not perform a statistical analysis.
The acute physiology and chronic health evaluation (APACHE II) score is designed to measure severity of disease in adult patients admitted to intensive care units. Wu et al. [15] analyzed data for patients with ischemic bowel-induced HPVG and found that high APACHE II scores and longer length of bowel resection were associated with poor prognosis. To our knowledge, no reports have discussed the relationship between vital signs and bowel necrosis. Although some articles suggest that physical examinations are associated with bowel necrosis [6, 16], our findings did not show a significant correlation between physical examinations and bowel necrosis.
In this study, we created diagnostic criteria based on the three risk factors that were found to be significant independent factors for bowel necrosis. These factors have high sensitivity and accuracy, and can be evaluated easily by physicians in the emergency department. Nowadays, with the development of highly advanced imaging techniques, potentially severe pathologies, such as bowel ischemia, are diagnosed at much earlier stages, allowing prompt treatment and significantly lower mortality [17]. Although it is difficult to diagnose the cause of acute abdominal pain and bowel necrosis in patients with an unstable condition in the emergency department, our new criteria will allow physicians to establish the presence of bowel necrosis and perform surgery as quickly as possible.
The limitations of our study were that it was retrospective and the study population was small. Moreover, complete surgical or pathological and laboratory evaluations were not available for every patient. However, its findings warrant a study involving a larger sample size in the future. This study demonstrates new and significant findings related to the risk factors for bowel necrosis in patients with HPVG. Using our new diagnostic criteria, the indications for emergency laparotomy can be established more accurately.