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Repair of a colonoscopic perforation of the rectum with transanal endoscopic microsurgery. Tech Coloproctol 2016; 20:721-3. [PMID: 27573197 DOI: 10.1007/s10151-016-1523-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/07/2016] [Accepted: 08/13/2016] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
Iatrogenic colonic perforations are relatively uncommon but serious complications of diagnostic and therapeutic colonoscopies. Transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM) is an useful approach to the rectum and may be used for repair of a rectal perforation during colonoscopy. A 56-year-old male had an iatrogenic perforation of the rectum during a routine follow-up colonoscopy repaired by TEM with an uneventful and rapid recovery.
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HIV-positive patients with anal carcinoma have poorer treatment tolerance and outcome than HIV-negative patients. Dis Colon Rectum 2001; 44:1496-502. [PMID: 11598480 DOI: 10.1007/bf02234605] [Citation(s) in RCA: 96] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/08/2023]
Abstract
PURPOSE Anal carcinoma is being found in HIV-positive patients with increasing frequency. Most patients are treated with combined chemotherapy and radiation. It was our impression that HIV-positive patients do not fare as well as HIV-negative patients in terms of both response to and tolerance of therapy. METHODS To test this hypothesis, we reviewed our experience with anal carcinoma and compared HIV-positive to HIV-negative patients by age, gender, sexual orientation, stage at diagnosis, treatment rendered, response to treatment, tolerance, and survival. From 1985 to 1998, 98 patients with anal neoplasms were treated. Seventy-three patients had invasive squamous-cell carcinoma (including cloacogenic carcinoma), and this cohort was analyzed. Thirteen patients were HIV positive and 60 were HIV negative. RESULTS The HIV-positive and HIV-negative groups differed significantly by age (42 vs. 62 years, P < 0.001), male gender (92 vs. 42 percent, P < 0.001), and homosexuality (46 vs. 15 percent, P < 0.05). There were no differences by stage at diagnosis or radiation dose received. Acute treatment major toxicity differed significantly (HIV positive 80 percent vs. HIV negative 30 percent; P < 0.005). Only 62 percent of HIV-positive patients were rendered disease free after initial therapy vs. 85 percent of HIV-negative patients (P = 0.11). Median time to cancer-related death was 1.4 vs. 5.3 years (P < 0.05). A survival model did not show age, gender, stage, or treatment to be independent predictors. CONCLUSION We found that HIV-positive patients with anal carcinoma seem to be a different population from HIV-negative patients by age, gender, and sexual orientation. They have a poorer tolerance for combined therapy and a shorter time to cancer-related death. A strong trend to poorer initial response rate was also seen. These results suggest that the treatment of HIV-positive patients with anal carcinoma needs to be reassessed.
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Abstract
Anorectal disorders are common and more than one half of the population will experience one at some time during their lives. It is important for the clinician to recognize the differences between internal and external hemorrhoids and other anorectal problems such as fissures, abscesses, fistulas, skin tags, and a variety of dermatologic conditions because the treatment is often different. This article will discuss the anatomy, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of internal and external hemorrhoids.
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Changes in circulating levels of HIV, CD4, and tissue expression of HIV in a patient with recent-onset ulcerative colitis treated by surgery. Case report. JOURNAL OF HUMAN VIROLOGY 1999; 2:52-7. [PMID: 10200600] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/11/2023]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine CD4+ T-cell count and circulating and tissue levels of HIV before and after surgery in a patient with recent-onset ulcerative colitis. STUDY DESIGN/METHODS CD4 lymphocytes and circulating and tissue HIV RNA levels were measured in an HIV-infected patient with ulcerative colitis before and after proctocolectomy. RESULTS Approximately 3 weeks prior to surgery for ulcerative colitis that was unresponsive to corticosteroids, the patient's CD4 count was 930 cells/mm3 and fell to 313 cells/mm3 within 10 days; the viral burden was approximately 80,000 RNA copies/mL. Tissue macrophages and lymphocytes in biopsy and resection specimens were shown to express high levels of HIV RNA by in situ hybridization. Five days postoperatively, the patient became asymptomatic and was discharged on tapering prednisone without antiretroviral agents. After surgery, the patient's CD4 count progressively rose, while viral RNA levels precipitously dropped. At 3, 6, and 15 weeks postoperatively, CD4 and viral RNA counts were 622 cells/mm3 and 31,300 RNA copies/mL, 843 cells/mm3 and 11,400 RNA copies/mL, and 747 cells/mm3 and 1500 RNA copies/mL, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Circulating levels of HIV and CD4+ cells, as well as tissue expression of HIV, apparently can be influenced by localized inflammatory processes such as those occurring in inflammatory bowel disease.
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Abstract
PURPOSE Physiologic tests such as manometry, colonic transit times, balloon compliance, defecography, pudendal nerve latency, and electromyography are used to evaluate patients with severe constipation. Patients referred because of severe constipation between 1991 and 1996 were studied to examine the role that physiologic testing played in making a diagnosis and directing treatment. METHODS Of 139 patients referred for severe idiopathic constipation, physiologic testing was recommended in 127, and 104 patients underwent the studies. The pretesting impression was noted, and test results were evaluated to determine diagnostic accuracy. If a specific initial impression was documented, tests were classified as refuting it, confirming it or confirming and adding significant information. If there was no clear pretest impression, tests were evaluated for their ability to indicate a diagnosis. The patient's history also was evaluated to determine what information was most useful in making a diagnosis. Historical features including duration of constipation, symptoms consistent with outlet obstruction or dysmotility, age, associated urinary incontinence, and prior hysterectomy were analyzed. Data were collected prospectively, then reviewed by an independent observer. RESULTS Ninety-eight study patients remained after 29 were excluded who did not undergo the recommended studies (19) or because no initial impression was documented (10). In 43 patients (44 percent), testing did not provide additional useful information. In 8 patients, testing confirmed the initial impression and added information impacting the treatment plan. Test results clearly refuted the initial impression in only one patient. In 46 (47 percent) patients the initial impression was uncertain, and in 43 (94 percent) of these, testing aided in making the diagnosis. In three cases, the diagnosis remained uncertain after testing. Prior hysterectomy (P = 0.003), urinary incontinence (P < 0.001), and symptoms of pelvic outlet obstruction (P = 0.03) were associated with a high incidence of rectocele. Defecography and transit times were the most useful tests. Surprisingly, symptoms of outlet obstruction or dysmotility did not show an overall correlation with transit times. CONCLUSIONS In one-half of these patients with severe constipation, physiologic testing added significant information, leading to a specific diagnosis. Pretesting history and symptoms did not predict which patients were most likely to benefit from these studies.
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Perianal manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus infection: experience with 260 patients. Dis Colon Rectum 1998; 41:606-11; discussion 611-2. [PMID: 9593244 DOI: 10.1007/bf02235268] [Citation(s) in RCA: 48] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/07/2023]
Abstract
PURPOSE Individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency virus often have disorders affecting the anorectum. These disorders may be complex and difficult to treat. We reported our early experience with 40 human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients with perianal disorders in 1990. We now present our series of 260 consecutive human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients with perianal disorders who underwent evaluation between 1989 and 1996 to examine the distribution of disorders, their treatments, and outcomes. METHOD Patients were identified at initial presentation and followed prospectively. RESULTS Two-hundred forty-nine (96 percent) of 260 patients were male, with an average age of 34.9 (range, 19-58) years. Average duration of human immunodeficiency virus positivity was 5 years, 5 months, with a maximum of 11 years, 5 months. Median CD4 count was 175 (range, 2-1,100) cells/mm3. Only 89 (34 percent) patients satisfied the criteria of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome at presentation. The most frequent major presenting symptoms were anorectal pain (55 percent), a mass (19 percent), and blood in the stool (16 percent). Risk factors included homosexuality (75 percent) and a prior history of sexually transmitted disease (45 percent). Forty different perianal disorders were identified, which were categorized as benign noninfectious (18), infectious (14), neoplastic (6), and septic (2). The most common disorders were condyloma (42 percent), fistula (34 percent), fissure (32 percent), and abscess (25 percent). Neoplasms were present in 19 patients (7 percent). One hundred seventy-one patients (66 percent) had more than one disorder, with an average of 2.9 disorders among these patients. Four hundred eighty-five procedures were performed on 178 patients (2.7/patient), with no mortalities and a 2 percent complication rate. Thirty-one patients (12 percent) died during the course of follow-up, but anorectal disease was the cause of death in only two patients. CONCLUSIONS Perianal manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus infection are common, often multiple, and varied. Patients with perianal disorders seek treatment throughout the course of the human immunodeficiency virus infection, and a perianal condition may be this disease's initial manifestation. Although recurrence is common and healing delayed, improved overall management of human immunodeficiency virus infection and a healthier human immunodeficiency virus-positive patient population have improved the outcome of surgical intervention in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients with perianal disorders.
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Abstract
We report a case of rare solitary neurofibroma of the transverse colon in a patient without neurofibromatosis. The patient was found to have an intussuscepting tumor prolapsing transanally, with massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding. This case represents only the second documented report of an isolated colonic neurofibroma.
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Abstract
A 49-year-old black woman with a 23-year history of Crohn's disease came to our clinic; she had a squamous cell carcinoma arising in an unhealed perineal wound 16 years after abdominoperineal resection (APR). We report this case to show the potential for malignant degeneration in such wounds. This patient had had multiple procedures for fistulotomies and incision and drainage of abscesses and, ultimately, an APR. After the APR, she had a persistent perineal wound, which did not fully heal despite extensive local and systemic therapy. Our examination revealed a chronic wound involving the entire perineum and vagina, including the labia, both inguinal folds, and the intergluteal cleft. Biopsies showed moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinoma throughout. We believe healing may be impaired in patients who have Crohn's disease, with a significant risk of unhealed perineal wounds after APR. Chronic unhealing wounds may progress to carcinoma, and this propensity toward transformation may be increased by immunosuppression. Complaints of persistent pain and unhealing wounds in the absence of infection in patients with Crohn's disease suggest the possibility of malignancy and biopsy is recommended.
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Abstract
Rectal prolapse remains a disorder for which the cause is not clearly understood and the best method of management is debated. Because the natural history of prolapse frequently leads to complications of incontinence and constipation, we believe that all patients presenting with internal and external prolapse should be considered for repair. Although the type of operative repair recommended may vary, it is clear that all patients with external rectal prolapse should be offered some type of repair. What is not clear from the literature is the appropriate management of those patients with internal prolapse. As shown in the George Washington University experience, surgery is rarely performed for isolated internal prolapse. Most patients who present with internal prolapse also have an associated enterocele, rectocele, or cystocele. Repair of the internal prolapse and the associated disorder may benefit many of these patients. If internal prolapse is an isolated finding, it is not clear to what extent the prolapse is responsible for the patient's symptoms, and repair is generally not advised. These guidelines are easy to enumerate but may be difficult to practice in some patients. Therefore, ongoing evaluation of clinical results is critical to improve our understanding of these disorders. This discussion has outlined the current theories of the cause of rectal prolapse, the symptoms and findings patients present with, and the possible approaches to repair.
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Abstract
UNLABELLED Transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM) was first used on a regular basis in the United States in 1990. Because there is a sole source of instrumentation, the surgeons who use this equipment are known to us. Thus, this earliest registry is a compilation of data based on most patients who underwent TEM in the United States from 1990 to 1994. METHOD One hundred fifty-three cases were voluntarily registered by six surgeons. Pathology included 54 carcinomas, 82 adenomas, and 17 other entities. Most resections were full thickness. Fifty percent of cases were out of reach of standard instruments. Complication rate, hospital stay, and blood loss were recorded. Technical difficulties at time of surgery (9 percent), early complications (15 percent), and late complications (5 percent) have been tabulated. RESULTS Recurrence rates for carcinoma were 10 percent for T1, 40 percent for T2, and 66 percent for T3 stages. Failures were treated by abdominoperineal resection or low anterior resection. Adenomas recurred in 11 percent, but these recurrences were small and easily treatable. CONCLUSION TEM has a low complication rate. By carefully selecting small, superficial cancers and adenomas, TEM results in superior outcome over other approaches to the mid and upper rectum.
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Abstract
PURPOSE The aim of this study was to review our experience with patients with rectoceles using very selective criteria for operative repair and to critically review our surgical results. METHODS This is a review of patients selected for rectocele repair between 1989 and 1994. RESULTS Two hundred seventy-nine patients were evaluated for pelvic outlet symptoms in our clinic. Defecography was performed in 180 patients; rectocele was seen in 143 patients (79 percent; 135 females and 8 males). On physical examination, 132 patients had a palpable rectocele (73 percent). Rectocele repair was recommended for 35 patients (13 percent); 33 (32 females and 1 male) underwent this procedure. Mean age was 55 (range, 16-78) years. Although many patients complained of constipation, incontinence and pelvic pain, in these 33 patients criteria for repair included the sensation of a vaginal mass or bulge that required digital support and/or rectal digitizing for evacuation (58 percent), retention of barium in the rectocele on defecography (55 percent), or a very large rectocele with internal anterior rectal wall prolapse (6 percent). A hysterectomy had been performed previously in 47 percent of women repaired. Rectocele repair was performed by a standard transanal approach in 31 patients and transabdominally in 2 patients. Hospital stay averaged 3.7 (range, 1-8) days. Few postoperative complications occurred; urinary retention was the most common (18 percent). All patients were followed postoperatively, and 26 patients (79 percent) answered a standardized questionnaire. Mean follow-up was 31 (range, 5-64) months. Eighty percent of patients questioned who initially complained of a vaginal mass or bulge reported complete resolution (significant improvement by the sign test, P < 0.5). Subjectively, 92 percent of patients questioned reported improvement in their preoperative symptoms and satisfaction with the operation. CONCLUSION Rectoceles are frequently identified during defecography, which is performed for pelvic floor complaints, yet are often asymptomatic. In contrast to other recent reports of rectocele repair, our data indicate that careful selection of patients using specific criteria may result in very good clinical results.
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Abstract
PURPOSE Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) has become the operation of choice for most patients with chronic ulcerative colitis and familial adenomatous polyposis. However, because of technical or disease factors at the time of pouch construction, IPAA must sometimes be abandoned. A retrospective review was conducted to find reasons for IPAA failure or abandonment. METHODS Since 1981, 103 patients have had to have an IPAA procedure at the George Washington University Medical Center in Washington, DC. All charts were reviewed and data retrospectively collected. RESULTS Six of 103 patients (six percent) were unable to have IPAA constructed. Five patients ultimately received a standard end ileostomy, and one had an ileorectal anastomosis. The reasons for abandoning the IPAA procedure were an ischemic pouch, failure to reach the anus, poorly controlled presacral hemorrhage, desmoid of the mesentery, and finding incurable colon carcinoma. CONCLUSIONS Information regarding the risk of failure or abandonment during the IPAA procedure should be discussed with the patient during preoperative counseling and must be included as an element of informed consent.
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Abstract
PURPOSE Individuals who are seropositive for the human immunodeficiency virus are at high risk for opportunistic infection and anorectal disorders. Little prospective information is available regarding anorectal pathogens in these patients. METHODS One hundred sixty-three HIV-seropositive patients presented to the colorectal clinic between 1989 and 1992. Forty-seven (29 percent) patients were thought to have an infectious process and were prospectively studied using a standardized multiculture protocol. RESULTS Mean age was 33 (range, 19-59) years. All were male; high-risk behavior accounted for 87 percent of HIV transmissions. Presenting complaints included anorectal pain (79 percent), pus per anum (28 percent), and blood per anum (26 percent). Examination revealed perianal tenderness (60 percent), condyloma (38 percent), perianal ulcers (38 percent), and anal fissures (34 percent). Sixty-six sets of cultures were performed; 28 patients had one set, 15 had two sets, and 4 had three sets. Thirty-two of these 47 patients (68 percent) had positive cultures including herpes (50 percent), cytomegalovirus (25 percent), Neisseria gonorrhoeae (16 percent), chlamydia (16 percent), acidfast bacilli (2 percent), and others (9 percent). Six of 32 patients with positive cultures had more than one organism cultured. Sixteen (50 percent) patients with positive cultures were treated medically, 8 (25 percent) were treated surgically and 8 (25 percent) were treated with both modalities. Sixty-one procedures were performed on 17 patients for condylomata. Eighteen patients had 20 procedures for abscesses, 50 percent of whom had positive cultures for other than common bowel flora; all improved. Fourteen patients underwent 33 procedures for perianal fistulas. Mycobacterium fortuitum was cultured from one patient who required 13 procedures for abscesses and fistulas. Forty-five (96 percent) patients were followed for an average of 12.5 months +/- 2.9 SEM (range, 1-94 months). Symptoms were improved or resolved in 22 of 32 (69 percent) patients with positive cultures and in 11 of 13 (84 percent) with negative cultures. CONCLUSIONS Specific pathogens may often be identified in human immunodeficiency virus-seropositive patients with anorectal disorders if aggressively sought. Although patients without specific pathogens identified may be expected to improve with planned empiric treatment, positive identification allows more directed therapy.
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Laparoscopic colorectal surgery. Dis Colon Rectum 1992; 35:614-5. [PMID: 1534046 DOI: 10.1007/bf02050546] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/27/2022]
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Abstract
Individuals who are seropositive for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) frequently have disorders affecting the anorectum, yet little has been reported on this subject. We reviewed our initial experience with patients with HIV referred to the Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery. Forty patients (age range, 19-45 years; mean, 32.2 years) were seen between 1985 and 1989. The mean duration of symptoms was six months (range, one week to six years). In 25 patients (63 percent), more than one anorectal condition was identified. Condylomata were seen in 21 patients (52 percent), and in 11 these were associated with other pathologies. Fistulas and/or abscesses were identified in 15 patients (37 percent). Three had a "watering-can perineum," all without any identifiable predisposing factors. Nineteen patients had symptomatic hemorrhoids (seven), fissures (17), and/or perianal herpes infections (five), usually in combination with other lesions (89 percent). Three individuals developed neoplastic processes. Rectal disease was discovered in addition in nine patients. This included nonspecific proctitis in four, a rectal mass in four (polyps, two; rectal diverticulum, one; and Kaposi's sarcoma, one), and a nonspecific rectal ulcer in one. Four patients had other symptoms, including diarrhea, incontinence, soiling, frequency, and/or urgency, always in combination with other anal disorders. Seventy-one operative procedures were performed in 31 patients (78 percent). Only six (8 percent) of these were for diagnosis and biopsy alone. Mean follow-up was 15.5 months in the 23 patients followed for greater than one month. Only 6 of 23 (26 percent) had resolution of their problem. Nine (39 percent) developed new perianal conditions. Anorectal disorders are often seen in patients infected with HIV. They may be aggressive, cause significant morbidity, and be difficult to resolve.
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Abstract
Fecal incontinence at night may be a disturbing consequence of ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA). The hypothesis was that decreases in anal canal resting pressure occur as sleep deepens and that the decreases are more profound in pouch patients with incontinence than in controls. Using a sleeve catheter assembly for recording intraluminal and canal pressure and polysomnographic recordings of sleep stages, progressive decreases in anal canal resting pressure with deepening sleep occurred in 11 healthy controls (mean +/- SEM: 57 +/- 3 mm Hg to 43 +/- 3 mm Hg: P less than 0.05) and in 11 patients after IPAA (55 +/- 3 mm Hg to 42 +/- 4 mm Hg; P less than 0.05). Minute-to-minute variations in mean pressure were also found in both controls and IPAA patients, and they were greater at night in patients (P less than 0.05), except during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. In three patients, resting pressure during REM sleep decreased markedly to 31 +/- 8 mm Hg. This decrease plus the variations in pressure during REM sleep led to incontinence. In conclusion, decreases in anal resting pressure coupled with marked minute-to-minute variations in pressure during sleep occurred in controls and in patients after IPAA and, when profound, led to nocturnal fecal incontinence in some patients.
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Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine whether the human anal sphincter responds dynamically to changing physiological states. In 19 healthy human subjects, intraluminal anal canal pressure was measured with a 5-cm perfused sleeve sensor during the day while fasting (3 hours) and after feeding (3 hours) and at night during sleep (8 hours). Daytime mean anal canal pressures (+/- SEM) while fasting (50 +/- 3 mm Hg) were similar to those after feeding (49 +/- 3 mm Hg) and to those at night during sleep (49 +/- 3 mm Hg). Marked minute-to-minute variations in mean pressure occurred in all three periods, however, as did large phasic increases and decreases in pressure (greater than 20 mm Hg) and small phasic changes in pressure less than 20 mm Hg (anal slow waves). The minute-to-minute variations in mean pressure were greater during the awake fed state (4 +/- 1 mm Hg/min) than at night during sleep (2 +/- 1 mm Hg/min; P less than 0.03), as were the number of large phasic waves per minute (increases in pressure: awake, fed = 0.5 +/- 1 waves/min, night = 0.3 +/- 0.1 waves/min, P less than 0.05; decreases in pressure: awake, fed = 0.4 +/- 0.1 waves/min, night = 0.2 +/- 0.1 waves/min, P less than 0.05). Anal small waves had a similar frequency of about 17 waves/min in all three states. In conclusion, the anal sphincter maintains a continuous pressure barrier to rectal outflow both during the day and at night during sleep. However, marked minute-to-minute variations in mean pressure and large phasic increases and decreases in pressure do occur. Both are fewer at night during sleep.
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Abstract
The authors' experience with children who have chronic ulcerative colitis was reviewed to compare their current surgical approach (ileoanal anastomosis) with earlier methods of management. Between 1960 and 1984, 137 children with chronic ulcerative colitis underwent surgery (mean duration of follow-up, 7.1 years). In 91 patients, the procedures were a total proctocolectomy with ileostomy or Kock pouch (66) or a lesser colectomy with either an ileostomy (16) or an ileorectal anastomosis (9) (group I). Forty-six patients underwent an ileoanal anastomosis procedure (group II). Children in group I were more likely to have significant preoperative loss of weight, a debilitated condition, and malnutrition. Urgent or emergency surgical intervention was required in 25 percent of patients in group I but in only 4 percent of patients in group II. Trends included 1) a younger age at operation in group II, 2) a higher mortality in group I (7.7 percent) than group II (0 percent), and 3) a higher perioperative mortality with emergency operations (23 percent) than elective procedures (1.6 percent). In group I, 98 percent of patients had an abdominal ostomy, but no patients in group II had an abdominal ostomy. The children with an ileoanal anastomosis had an average of 4.8 stools during waking hours and 1.3 stools each night. On the basis of this experience, the authors recommend use of the ileoanal anastomosis procedure in the surgical treatment of chronic ulcerative colitis in children.
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A technique for decompression of the obstructed Kock continent ileostomy. SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY & OBSTETRICS 1990; 170:75-6. [PMID: 2294635] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
A technique is described for intubation of the difficult, obstructed continent ileostomy. This procedure is safe and easily performed with commonly available materials. It initiates immediate primary treatment of the problem with decompression and catheter drainage, and also allows direct inspection of the pouch and valve to assist with planning of definitive treatment.
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Abstract
Cyclic 48-h unipolar depression is a rare form of recurrent affective disorder. We studied a single patient to determine (a) if there is an association between psychiatric status and migrating motor complex activity; and (b) if phase III of the migrating motor complex is in phase with rapid eye movement sleep in depression. There was marked reduction in phase III of the migrating motor complex during the depressed (n = 7) compared with the euthymic phase (n = 13), and a lack of coherence between phase III migrating motor complex activity and sleep stages in both depressed and nondepressed phases. The depressed state may be associated with altered upper gastrointestinal motor function.
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Abstract
To determine the perioperative mortality and morbidity and the longterm prognosis of patients undergoing extended pelvic resections for localized advanced primary adenocarcinoma of the rectum, the authors reviewed their experience with 65 patients operated on between 1956 and 1984. Local invasion without distant metastasis was present in all patients at operation and en bloc resection of all involved organs was performed with intent of cure. Average age at operation was 61 years; 15 (23 percent) were men and 50 (77 percent) were women. Operations included abdominoperineal resection in 37 patients (57 percent), low anterior resection in 20 patients (31 percent), and Hartmann procedure in 8 patients (12 percent). Additionally, 34 of 42 women (81 percent) with intact uteri underwent en bloc hysterectomy, 37 of 48 women (77 percent) with intact ovaries had oophorectomy, and 25 of 50 women (50 percent) had partial vaginal resection. Seventeen of the 65 patients (26 percent) had a cystectomy, and 2 patients had a portion of small intestine resected in continuity with their tumor. Pathologic examination revealed lymph node involvement in 29 patients (45 percent) and histologic confirmation of adjacent organ extension in 37 patients (57 percent). There were no perioperative deaths, the average survival was 5.7 years, and 25 patients (38 percent) were alive after a mean follow-up period of 9.3 years. Overall five-year survival was 52 percent. Forty patients died during the follow-up period, with 26 (65 percent) of the deaths attributable to either recurrent carcinoma (25 patients) or a new primary lesion (1 patient). The cumulative probability of tumor recurrence at five years was 39 percent.
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Abstract
Proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis increases the frequency of stooling, perhaps due in part to the loss of an ileocecal or colonic braking effect on gastrointestinal transit. To assess whether colectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) or with ileostomy accelerates gastrointestinal transit, we studied 16 IPAA patients (mean +/- SEM stool frequency, 8 +/- 1 stools/day), 5 patients after colectomy and Brooke ileostomy, and 8 healthy, unoperated controls (1 +/- 1 stools/day). Gastric emptying of liquids and small bowel transit of chyme were measured concurrently with a dual isotope technique. Gastric emptying was similar among all groups. In contrast, postprandial small bowel transit of the head of a duodenal marker was slowed, not accelerated, in IPAA patients (178 +/- 26 min) compared to Brooke subjects (80 +/- 32 min, P less than 0.05) and controls (75 +/- 15 min, P less than 0.01). Maximal filling of both the ileal pouch (341 +/- 19 min) and the ileostomy bag (348 +/- 12 min) occurred later than filling of the colon in controls (243 +/- 32 min, P less than 0.01). Overall stool frequency did not correlate with small bowel transit in the ileoanal patients, but the two ileoanal subjects with greatest stool frequency (11 and 18 stools/day) had the earliest arrival of marker at the pouch. In conclusion, removal of the colon markedly slowed small bowel transit in most patients, although it did not alter gastric emptying of liquids. Creation of an ileal pouch and ileoanal anastomosis further slowed transit of the head of the meal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Abstract
To determine whether perianal Crohn's disease responds to resection of active intra-abdominal disease or to diversion, 273 cases of Crohn's disease in children (ages 4 to 18 years) were reviewed (all had been seen between 1970 and 1983). Of these, 104 patients underwent an intestinal operation, and 42 of the 104 (40%) had documented perianal disease at the time of their operation. Follow-up averaged 8 3/4 years from time of diagnosis. Three of the 42 died, at 1, 3, and 5 months postoperatively (mortality, 7%) and one was unavailable for follow-up. In these 42 patients with active perianal disease, an intestinal resection with primary anastomosis was performed in 19; one died postoperatively and one was unavailable for follow-up. Of the remaining 17 patients, five (29%) improved and 12 (71%) had continued perianal disease, either without change or worse. At least one further intestinal resection was needed in five of the 17 and two have needed proctocolectomy. A defunctionalizing procedure was done as part of the initial operation in 11 of the 42 patients. Two showed improvement; however, both needed proctocolectomy for rectal disease, and none of the 11 with fecal diversion have had reestablishment of intestinal continuity. In 12 of the 42 patients proctocolectomy was the initial procedure, usually for severe rectosigmoid disease. Of 38 children followed, 20 had proctocolectomy, 11 initially and nine after lesser procedures; overall rate of proctocolectomy was 53%. Resection of active intra-abdominal disease is not necessarily followed by resolution of perianal lesions. Defunctionalizing the rectum with fecal diversion does not appear to alter perianal disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis catheters in children. ARCHIVES OF SURGERY (CHICAGO, ILL. : 1960) 1983; 118:1398-402. [PMID: 6651516 DOI: 10.1001/archsurg.1983.01390120028008] [Citation(s) in RCA: 26] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/21/2023]
Abstract
Based on clinical experience with 35 subjects younger than 21 years of age who underwent continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) during a two-year period at our institution, this procedure was found to be superior to hemodialysis in children because it allowed great freedom of activity and produced fewer complications requiring hospitalization. Moreover, CAPD appeared to be less expensive than hemodialysis, and no mortality or significant morbidity occurred during the 386 patient-months of catheter usage. Exit site infections, peritonitis, and abdominal hernias were the most common complications, often requiring minor surgical repairs. Using a specific operative technique for catheter placement and smaller volumes of dialysate during the first week after placement, these complications were minimized. Thus, CAPD is an effective, advantageous method for treatment of end-stage renal disease in children.
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458. Unsaturated lactones and related substances . (a) Introduction . (b) Part I. Unsaturated γ-lactones from keto-acids. The position of the double bond. ACTA ACUST UNITED AC 1950. [DOI: 10.1039/jr9500002213] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/21/2022]
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461. Unsaturated lactones and related substances. Part IV. Lactonic products derived from muconic acid. ACTA ACUST UNITED AC 1950. [DOI: 10.1039/jr9500002228] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/21/2022]
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