Abstract
A 72-year-old Japanese woman presented with a fever, diarrhea, intermittent spotting, and constant fluid discharge from the vagina. Imaging studies revealed an enterovaginal fistula. She underwent radical hysterectomy and radiotherapy 35 years previously. She also had a surgical history of nephrostomy, nephrectomy, ileoascending anastomosis, and colostomy. As bleeding from the enterovaginal fistula was uncontrollable, ileocecal resection was performed. However, a colovesical fistula with urinary tract infection occurred 3 months later. The present case indicates that fistula formation occurs and causes various symptoms in patients who underwent postpelvic radiotherapy, particularly in those with prior surgeries in the irradiated field.
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Iwamuro, M., Hasegawa, K., Hanayama, Y., Kataoka, H., Tanaka, T., Kondo, Y., & Otsuka, F. (2018). Enterovaginal and colovesical fistulas as late complications of pelvic radiotherapy. Journal of General and Family Medicine, 19(5), 166–169. https://doi.org/10.1002/jgf2.184
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