Abstrakt: |
ABSTRACT: From 1973 through 1979, 32 patients over 60 years of age were admitted to the Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, because of a perforated gastric or duodenal ulcer. In many of them, the symptoms and physical findings were minimal. In abdominal roentgenograms (subject erect or supine), only 17 (60 percent) of these patients showed free intraperitoneal air. Among the 29 surgically treated patients, plication of the ulcer was performed in 28 and hemigastrectomy‐vagotomy in one. The postoperative morbidity rate was 62 percent, and the mortality rate 17 percent. In 3 of the 32 patients, the diagnosis of perforated ulcer was established only at autopsy. Thus, failure to diagnose this condition accurately may be the principal cause of death in elderly patients with a perforated peptic ulcer. The increased use is recommended of contrast roentgenograms of the stomach and duodenum and of endoscopy, in an effort to improve diagnostic accuracy in dealing with perforated peptic ulcers. |