LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORT

Oral cavity carcinoma is a malignant disease that accounts for 30% of all head and neck carcinomas. It occurs about 4 times more often in men than in women. Predisposing factors include tobacco smoking, regular alcohol consumption, poor oral hygiene, chronic dental diseases, and HPV (Human Papilloma...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Proletina Bozdukova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Union of Scientists - Stara Zagora 2025-04-01
Series:Science & Research
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.sandtr.org/download.php?id=159
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850183989520760832
author Proletina Bozdukova
author_facet Proletina Bozdukova
author_sort Proletina Bozdukova
collection DOAJ
description Oral cavity carcinoma is a malignant disease that accounts for 30% of all head and neck carcinomas. It occurs about 4 times more often in men than in women. Predisposing factors include tobacco smoking, regular alcohol consumption, poor oral hygiene, chronic dental diseases, and HPV (Human Papillomavirus) infection. The rich blood supply to the head and neck is a cause for the frequent and early metastasis to regional lymph nodes in malignant diseases with primary localization in the structures of the oral cavity. In this report, we present a clinical case of a 51 year old man with carcinoma of the floor of the oral cavity with metastases to the submandibular lymph nodes - level IB, who underwent surgical treatment with adjuvant radiotherapy for the primary tumour and neck metastases at another medical institution. He was admitted to ENT Clinic-UMHAT Burgas urgently due to bleeding from an open postoperative wound measuring approximately 5 cm in diameter in the submandibular region. Multiple blood transfusions were performed due to low hemoglobin levels (52g/L). After stabilizing the patient, several surgical interventions were performed in stages to close the postoperative wound, initially covered with a deltopectoral flap. Subsequent surgical interventions included selective lymph node dissection and flap remodelling. After completing the surgical treatment, repeat radiotherapy was performed in the neck area with a volume of 60 Gy, followed by a control fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET), which revealed an active lymph node from the upper jugular group suspicious for metastasis. A core biopsy of the lesion was performed, histologically confirming the diagnosis. An operative intervention was undertaken to remove the jugular lymph nodes and cover the surgical wound with a supraclavicular flap.
format Article
id doaj-art-a3e3e66908864e7ead4d067b6d5ff716
institution OA Journals
issn 2535-0765
language English
publishDate 2025-04-01
publisher Union of Scientists - Stara Zagora
record_format Article
series Science & Research
spelling doaj-art-a3e3e66908864e7ead4d067b6d5ff7162025-08-20T02:17:09ZengUnion of Scientists - Stara ZagoraScience & Research2535-07652025-04-01159LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORTProletina BozdukovaOral cavity carcinoma is a malignant disease that accounts for 30% of all head and neck carcinomas. It occurs about 4 times more often in men than in women. Predisposing factors include tobacco smoking, regular alcohol consumption, poor oral hygiene, chronic dental diseases, and HPV (Human Papillomavirus) infection. The rich blood supply to the head and neck is a cause for the frequent and early metastasis to regional lymph nodes in malignant diseases with primary localization in the structures of the oral cavity. In this report, we present a clinical case of a 51 year old man with carcinoma of the floor of the oral cavity with metastases to the submandibular lymph nodes - level IB, who underwent surgical treatment with adjuvant radiotherapy for the primary tumour and neck metastases at another medical institution. He was admitted to ENT Clinic-UMHAT Burgas urgently due to bleeding from an open postoperative wound measuring approximately 5 cm in diameter in the submandibular region. Multiple blood transfusions were performed due to low hemoglobin levels (52g/L). After stabilizing the patient, several surgical interventions were performed in stages to close the postoperative wound, initially covered with a deltopectoral flap. Subsequent surgical interventions included selective lymph node dissection and flap remodelling. After completing the surgical treatment, repeat radiotherapy was performed in the neck area with a volume of 60 Gy, followed by a control fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET), which revealed an active lymph node from the upper jugular group suspicious for metastasis. A core biopsy of the lesion was performed, histologically confirming the diagnosis. An operative intervention was undertaken to remove the jugular lymph nodes and cover the surgical wound with a supraclavicular flap. http://www.sandtr.org/download.php?id=159 oral cavity carcinomacervical lymph nodescore biopsydeltopectoral flap
spellingShingle Proletina Bozdukova
LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORT
Science & Research
oral cavity carcinoma
cervical lymph nodes
core biopsy
deltopectoral flap
title LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORT
title_full LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORT
title_fullStr LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORT
title_full_unstemmed LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORT
title_short LIFE-THREATENING HEMORRHAGE FROM POSTOPERATIVE NECK WOUND- A CASE REPORT
title_sort life threatening hemorrhage from postoperative neck wound a case report
topic oral cavity carcinoma
cervical lymph nodes
core biopsy
deltopectoral flap
url http://www.sandtr.org/download.php?id=159
work_keys_str_mv AT proletinabozdukova lifethreateninghemorrhagefrompostoperativeneckwoundacasereport