key: cord-0766467-1cszexof authors: Kühn, Florian; Klein, Matthias; Laven, Henning; Börner, Nikolaus; Weinberger, Tobias; Streitparth, Florian; Werner, Jens; Schiergens, Tobias S. title: Specific Management of Patients with Acute Abdomen during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Surgical Perspective from Germany date: 2020-06-11 journal: Visc Med DOI: 10.1159/000509122 sha: 2ae1d7c2aacbdb2bf11551aabf156f7a16027b0b doc_id: 766467 cord_uid: 1cszexof During the current COVID-19 pandemic, the triage, assessment, and management of patients presenting to the emergency department with critical conditions has become ­challenging. The clinical features of COVID-19 are heterogeneous and subtle in many cases. They may easily be overlooked in the case of other acute diseases. Gastrointestinal symptoms are common in patients with COVID-19 as SARS-CoV-2 is able to enter gastrointestinal epithelial cells. However, these complaints can also be caused by a COVID-19-independent concomitant abdominal pathology. Therefore, patients with acute abdominal pain and fever need to be assessed very thoroughly. Based on a clinical case, we present our approach of managing emergency patients with acute abdomen and concomitant suspicion of ­COVID-19. A 59-year-old male patient presented to the emergency department (ED) due to acute abdominal pain. Further history revealed fever, fatigue, headache, and nausea for approximately 5 days. As the fever had been noticed days before the onset of the abdominal pain, the patient was triaged as potentially COVID-19 positive. When patients present to our ED, a general initial COVID-19 risk assessment at a segregated triage point aims to assign patients to either a locally separated infectious diseases ED (ID-ED) or to the noninfectious ED (NI-ED). Furthermore, all patients are triaged according to the Emergency Severity Index (ESI) [1] [2] [3] . Assessment is done by a specially trained triage nurse under the supervision of a physician. These initial items include having had contact with a person with COVID-19 within the last 14 days, a body temperature of more than 37.5 ° C or intake of antipyretics within the last 6 h, respiratory symptoms such as cough or dyspnea, and a new absence of olfaction. If 1 item (or more) is positive or a patient cannot be assessed for all items (e.g., due to dementia or loss of consciousness), he/she is first treated at the ID-ED. All patients who are found to bear a risk for COVID-19 are further treated in separated single rooms with contact precautions (patient: surgical face mask; staff: FFP2 mask, Streitparth/Werner/Schiergens Visc Med 2 DOI: 10.1159/000509122 glasses, gloves, and gown) until COVID-19 can be ruled out. Accordingly, the presented patient received a triage index score ESI 2 and entered the ID-ED area. Nasal and pharyngeal swabs were taken for further assessment including PCR-based testing for SARS-CoV-2-RNA N-gene-1. The laboratory findings are shown in Table 1 and they are compared to typical findings in COVID-19 patients. They show markedly elevated levels of CRP (17.3 mg/dL) and interleukin 6 (2,166 pg/mL), lymphocytopenia (0.20 G/L), eosinopenia (< 0.01 G/L), and hypoalbuminemia, and an increase in serum ferritin (2,125 ng/mL). High-resolution computed tomography (HR-CT) of the thorax and abdomen was conducted immediately ( Fig 1A, B ) as PCR results were pending but fever and eosinopenia made COVID-19 likely. Our ID-ED unit comprises separate X-ray equipment and CT scanners to ensure a quick workup despite the necessity of contact precautions. CT revealed an intra-abdominal abscess and moderate amounts of free intra-abdominal air, probably due to a perforated jejunal diverticulum. Thoracic CT resulted in mild ground-glass opacity as well as bronchiectasislike changes in both inferior lobes, which was considered suspicious for COVID-19 ( Fig. 1B) [4] . Based on those findings, emergency surgery for the intestinal perforation was indicated. Since COVID-19 could not be ruled out and the result for the swabs were not expected before the next day, all COVID-19 safety measures were continued during further management. Patients who are suspicious for COVID-19 or have confirmed diagnosis are transported under strict isolation measures in COVID-19-designated escalators and corridors where possible. During induction of anesthesia, safety measures include wearing FFP3 masks, the use of virus-tight HME filters in the ventilation systems, and the rapid sequence induction procedure for intubation with primary use of video laryngoscopy. Operations are conducted in a specifically designated COVID-19 operating room with ventilation-technical equipment facilitating a negative air pressure. The intraoperative safety measures are based on currently available recommendations (i.e., from the American College of Surgeons) and include FFP2 masks, safety glasses/face shields, double surgical gloves, a water-proof gown, shoe covers, performing an open surgical procedure, maximum reduction of aerosols (e.g., avoiding electrocautery and high-speed tools, double aspiration) [5] [6] [7] . In the present case, we found a perforated jejunal diverticulum with an abscess and local peritonitis (Fig. 1C) ; an open small-bowel segmental resection and anastomosis were performed. Following the operation, the patient remained intubated and was conveyed to one of our designated COVID-19 intensive care units. The day after the operation, the SARS-CoV-2-RNA test from nasal and pharyngeal swabs turned out to be positive. A bedside portable chest radiograph on postoperative day 1 showed slight basilar opacities in both lungs (Fig. 1D) , consistent with the findings on chest CT on admission. On postoperative day 3, the patient was transferred to one of our COVID-19 intermediate care units. Here, SARS-CoV-2-RNA was detected in a postoperative PCR-based stool analysis, whereas it was not present in swabs taken from intra-abdominal drains. Sputum analysis on postoperative day 8 turned out to be still positive. The completely asymptomatic patient was discharged 10 days after the initial surgery and put in home quarantine for 14 days. The present case and our standardized assessment, triage, and management process emphasize the importance of a "safety first" principle in the management of patients presenting with an acute abdomen during the COVID-19 pandemic in order to reduce risks for patients and medical staff. Prehospital triage and in-hospital safety measures must begin at the first patient contact. Our presented case and its management show that the assessment of patients with an acute abdomen is challenging due to overlapping of typical and atypical symptoms as well as laboratory and radiologic findings, depending on the disease stage. Furthermore, high SARS-CoV-2 RNA concentrations and sgRNA-containing cells could be detected in the stool of infected patients [2, 8] , indicating active replication in the gastrointestinal tract in analogy with SARS-CoV, which was shown to be excreted in stool, from which it could be isolated. This may be of significance especially in gastrointestinal perforations regarding potential transmission and infection control intra-and postoperatively [2] . If there is any suspicion of COVID-19, all safety measures should be rigorously applied and continued until proof of the contrary is obtained. An obvious intra-abdominal septic focus with a concomitant fever does not rule out a COVID-19 infection. Currently, the same holds true for any other medical condition when any signs of COVID-19 are present. Besides, also asymptomatic carriers are a problem for the health care system. At the time point when testing becomes more readily and widely available, testing of all patients admitted to the hospital will need to be considered. No studies on humans or animals were performed. The patient data of this report was collected retrospectively and treated anonymously. Review article: gastrointestinal features in COVID-19 and the possibility of faecal transmission Covid-19 and the digestive system Five-level emergency triage systems: variation in assessment of validity CT Imaging Features of 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV). Radiology Managing COVID-19 in Surgical Systems Maximizing the Calm before the Storm: Tiered Surgical Response Plan for Novel Coronavirus (COV-ID-19) Precautions for operating room team members during the COVID-19 pandemic Virological assessment of hospitalized patients with COVID-2019 The authors declare that no conflict of interests exists. No funding was received for the present report. F.K. and T.S.S. designed this report, acquired data, interpreted data, and wrote this paper. M.K., H.L., N.B., T.W., F.S., and J.W. interpreted and discussed data and critically revised this paper for intellectual content. All of the authors revised and approved this work for publication.