Typhlitis in acute leukemia. Successful treatment by early surgical intervention

Inflammation of the cecum (“typhlitis”) has been an unusual, but generally fatal complication of severe granulocytopenia and immunosuppresion, occurring during the therapy of hematological malignancies. The diagnosis has usually been made only at autopsy, and early surgical intervention has often been withheld because of the patient's precarious hematological status. We report here a patient in whom the clinical diagnosis of typhlitis led to early operation, with intensive blood component support. The successful outcome suggests that such an approach might improve the usually grim prognosis in patients whose underlying malignancy offers a clear chance for remission. Cancer 43:695–697, 1979.

[1]  T. Cronin,et al.  Typhlitis complicating leukemia in an adult: barium enema findings. , 1977, AJR. American journal of roentgenology.

[2]  P. Exelby,et al.  Management of the acute abdomen in children with leukemia , 1975, Cancer.

[3]  M. Woolley,et al.  The ileocecal syndrome in acute childhood leukemia. , 1973, Archives of surgery.

[4]  D. Steinberg,et al.  Necrotizing enterocolitis in leukemia. , 1973, Archives of internal medicine.

[5]  Hobson Rw nd,et al.  Cecal necrosis and perforation with systemic chemotherapy. , 1973 .

[6]  F. Rosner,et al.  Major surgery in patients with acute leukemia. , 1972, American journal of surgery.

[7]  H. Rosenberg,et al.  Typhlitis: a complication of leukemia in childhood. , 1970, The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy, and nuclear medicine.

[8]  J. Prolla,et al.  THE GASTROINTESTINAL LESIONS AND COMPLICATIONS OF THE LEUKEMIAS. , 1964, Annals of internal medicine.