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Query: UMLS:C0009324 (ulcerative colitis)
17,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirty-seven patients underwent construction of a J-ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) without temporary diverting ileostomy for chronic ulcerative colitis (CUC) (20 patients), familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) (15 patients), indeterminate colitis (1 patient) and nonhereditary polyposis coli (1 patient) between 1981 and 1990. Seven of 20 CUC patients (35 percent) were on steroids at the time of hospital admission. The postoperative course of these patients was compared with that of a group of patients undergoing IPAA with ileostomy during that same time period and matched for age, sex, diagnosis, date of surgery, and steroid use. Eight patients (22 percent) in the group without ileostomy and four patients (11 percent) with ileostomy experienced one or more postoperative pouch-related complications. Complications requiring reoperation in patients without ileostomy occurred more frequently in patients either taking steroids or having previous pelvic radiation therapy. Functional results in patients undergoing one-stage procedures after a mean of 28 postoperative months were comparable to those in patients having staged procedures. Surgeons' criteria for a one-stage procedure in these patients should include absolute lack of tension on the anastomosis, good blood supply to the terminal ileum, good general health, and absence of recent intake of steroids at the time of surgery. We conclude that J-pouch construction with IPAA can be safely performed without diverting ileostomy, provided that these selection factors are taken into account.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Oct
PMID:Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis without ileostomy. 165 69

Of 362 patients undergoing ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, 12 (five with chronic ulcerative colitis and seven with familial adenomatous polyposis) had 16 associated carcinomas. Incidental carcinoma was found in four patients who had undergone ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, six patients had known carcinoma, and carcinoma was suspected in two patients with high-grade dysplasia. No tumor was Stage C or D. After a median observation period of 24 months, no evidence of recurrence was documented. Data suggest that patients with carcinoma complicating chronic ulcerative colitis and familial adenomatous polyposis can safely undergo ileal pouch-anal anastomosis; however, it may be prudent to perform resection and later ileal pouch-anal anastomosis after a period of observation and appropriate adjuvant therapy because of the difficulty in intraoperative staging.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Sep
PMID:Carcinoma and the ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. 165 70

Ileal diversion is an important adjunct to restorative proctocolectomy but may produce increased morbidity and requires a second-stage closure. This study reports results utilizing a one-stage procedure designed to retain the benefits of proximal decompression without the liabilities of additional surgical procedures. Eight patients, three men (with ulcerative colitis) and five women (one with familial polyposis coli and four with ulcerative colitis), were selected for the single-stage restorative proctocolectomy with intraluminal decompression in lieu of diverting loop ileostomy. The abdominal proctocolectomy was performed to the level of the anorectal junction. In five patients, the rectum was closed using the TA 55 (U.S. Surgical Corporation, Norwalk, CT), 4.8-mm stapler. AJ-pouch was constructed with multiple firings of the GIA90 (U.S. Surgical Corporation) stapler. These patients had continuity restored utilizing a transanal, circular stapler. Three patients had an S-pouch constructed by suture technique. Fecal diversion was accomplished with a 25-mm intraluminal bypass tube (Coloshield; Deknetel, Fall River, MA) in all cases. There was no mortality. There were no anastomotic complications or morbidity related to the bypass tube. The tube dislodged and passed between days 18 and 26 (mean, 22.1 days). All patients had three to six bowel movements per 24 hours, and all are continent day and night. This experience suggests that, in selected patients, the intraluminal bypass tube may be an excellent alternative to diverting ileostomy.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Nov
PMID:Pouch-anal anastomosis without diverting ileostomy. 165 56

Sixty-nine patients were operated upon in a three-stage procedure. Early complications occurred in 29 percent after colectomy-ileostomy, in 25 percent after proctomucosectomy with ileoanal anastomosis and loop ileostomy, and in 9 percent after closure of loop ileostomy. Only three of these were considered serious. Seventy-one percent of the patients were readmitted into the hospital between the three operations or after the last one. Total hospital stay was 49 days (median); the range was 20 to 345 days. Reconstruction of the reservoir was performed in four patients owing to defecation problems, with satisfying functional results in two patients, while two emptied by catheter. There was no postoperative mortality or pelvic sepsis, and no pouches were excised. Ileostomy was re-established in two patients. At histopathologic re-evaluation of colectomy specimens, the diagnosis was changed from ulcerative colitis to Crohn's disease in three patients and to indeterminate colitis in five. Median follow-up was 4.3 years. Continent anal defecation without ileostomy was achieved in 67 patients (97 percent), with 4.1 bowel movements per day and 0.6 per night. Perfect continence was achieved in 55 percent in the daytime and in 43 percent at night. The low rate of reservoir-threatening complications is attributed to the three-stage procedure and the technical details in the surgical procedures.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 Jan
PMID:Colectomy-proctomucosectomy with S-pouch: operative procedures, complications, and functional outcome in 69 consecutive patients. 173 82

Extraintestinal manifestations of inflammatory bowel disease are legion and are demonstrated in one-third of those afflicted. In general, they do not mandate surgery. Three patients with active pancolonic ulcerative colitis developed arterial thromboembolic complications prior to surgical treatment. Thromboembolic complications are not fully understood, as is evidenced by the paucity of information in the literature, and only sporadic cases of arterial thromboemboli are found. These have been described primarily in the postsurgical patient. To ascertain whether others have encountered similar cases, a survey form was distributed to members of The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, yielding an additional 54 patients with thromboembolic complications. Approximately two-thirds were deep venous thromboses and/or pulmonary emboli. Ten patients had cerebrovascular accidents, and eight had arterial emboli. Eleven patients, over 21 percent, suffered multiple events. There were four resultant mortalities. An arterial thromboembolic event in a patient with ulcerative colitis is usually associated with pancolonic disease, has a poor long-term prognosis, and is an indication for colectomy.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 Feb
PMID:Arterial thromboembolic complications of inflammatory bowel disease. Report of three cases. 173 24

A case of adenocarcinoma developing in the pouch following restorative proctocolectomy is presented. This seems to be the third reported in the literature. The carcinoma developed from the remnants of precancerous rectal mucosa left in the muscular rectal cuff. The patient had been suffering from ulcerative colitis for 17 years prior to the development of the malignancy. He presented with features of subacute intestinal obstruction. Diagnosis was by sigmoidoscopic examination of the pouch and biopsy. He was treated with abdominoperineal resection of the pouch and rectum, followed by chemotherapy.
Dis Colon Rectum 1992 Mar
PMID:Carcinoma of the rectal pouch following restorative proctocolectomy. Report of a case. 174 73

Peristomal variceal bleeding is a serious complication in patients with chronic liver disease undergoing colon surgery with a stoma. Our aim was to examine the morbidity of bleeding for peristomal, perianastomotic, and esophageal varices in a group of patients with chronic liver disease who underwent colectomy at the Mayo Clinic between 1970 and 1988. Morbidity was evaluated in terms of the number of major bleeding episodes and the number of units of blood transfused. The treatment of bleeding was also evaluated. One hundred seventeen patients (74 males and 43 females) aged 11-78 years were studied. Sixty-two patients (53 percent) had a permanent stoma, while 55 patients (47 percent) had a colonic resection and anastomosis. Sixty-seven patients (62 percent) had chronic ulcerative colitis and primary sclerosing cholangitis. In the stoma group, bleeding appeared from stomal and/or esophageal varices in 19 patients (31 percent), while, in the non-stoma group, bleeding exclusively from the esophageal varices occurred in eight patients (15 percent). Perianastomotic variceal bleeding was never observed. The 5-year cumulative probabilities of one major bleed occurring from gastrointestinal varices appeared to be similar between the two groups. Patients who bled from peristomal varices with or without esophageal bleeding (n = 17) rebled more frequently (6.5 +/- 5.5 vs. 3 +/- 1.6; P less than 0.05) and were transfused more often (14.9 +/- 12.3 vs. 7.5 +/- 4.1; P less than 0.05) than patients who bled exclusively from esophageal varices (n = 10). No difference was found in the incidence of recurrent bleeding and the number of units of blood transfused between patients who bled exclusively from peristomal varices (n = 10) and those who bled from both peristomal and esophageal varices (n = 7). Medical and local measures were more effective in controlling esophageal bleeding than in controlling peristomal bleeding. Therefore, patients with chronic liver disease who must undergo colectomy should have a distal anastomosis rather than a terminal stoma.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Dec
PMID:Bleeding from peristomal varices: perspectives on prevention and treatment. 183 95

The presence of intraepithelial inclusion bodies (Leuchtenberger bodies) was recorded in rectal or colonic specimens from 130 patients. Large to moderate number of intraepithelial bodies were recorded in 81.8 percent of 55 colorectal adenomas from patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). Conversely, none of the 55 non-FAP adenomas or of the 20 specimens with ulcerative colitis (10 with dysplasia) had similar amounts of intraepithelial granules. Feulgen studies demonstrated that the granules contain DNA and are probably nuclear fragments of destroyed lymphocytes. Although the pathogenesis of this phenomenon remains obscure, it appears that the presence of large to moderate number of intraepithelial bodies in colorectal adenomas should strongly raise the suspicion of FAP.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Jan
PMID:Intraepithelial bodies in colorectal adenomas: Leuchtenberger bodies revisited. 184 99

Patients with Crohn's colitis are generally not considered candidates for the ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) procedure. We reviewed 362 consecutive patients undergoing IPAA and analyzed the outcome of this procedure on 25 patients with a preoperative diagnosis of mucosal ulcerative colitis who were subsequently proven to have Crohn's disease. The mean follow-up was 38.1 months. Sixteen patients have a functioning pouch, seven have required pouch excision, one is diverted, and one has died. Only one of nine patients in whom there was a preoperative clinical feature suggestive of Crohn's disease has a functioning pouch, with complications uniformly occurring within months of ileostomy closure. In contrast, 15 of 16 patients without preoperative features of Crohn's disease have maintained their pouch, generally with good results. These data suggest that patients in whom there is clinical and pathologic evidence of Crohn's disease do very poorly without meaningful symptom-free intervals. However, patients without any clinical features of Crohn's disease, despite a histopathologic diagnosis of Crohn's colitis, have had a good outcome with IPAA thus far.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Aug
PMID:Consequences of ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for Crohn's colitis. 185 21

This study retrospectively evaluated 288 patients who had undergone ileal pouch-anal anastomosis to determine the incidence of perineal complications and to relate these findings to the pathologic diagnosis, with the goal of specifically clarifying the appropriate surgical management of patients with indeterminate colitis. Of these 288 patients, 235 patients (82 percent) had a diagnosis of chronic ulcerative colitis, 18 patients (6 percent) had indeterminate colitis, 6 patients (2 percent) had Crohn's disease, and 29 patients (10 percent) had familial polyposis. All complications occurred at least 6 months after closure of the stoma and required operative therapy. Of 18 patients with indeterminate colitis, 9 patients experienced complications (50 percent) vs. 8 of 235 patients with chronic ulcerative colitis (3 percent), a highly significant difference (P less 0.001). Furthermore, the risk of eventual ileostomy because of perineal complications was 0.4 percent in patients with chronic ulcerative colitis vs. 28 percent in patients with indeterminate colitis (P less than 0.001). We conclude that a diagnosis of indeterminate colitis predisposes the patient undergoing ileal pouch-anal anastomosis to perineal complications, with a resultant high chance of reservoir loss. Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis should be considered with caution in the patient with a diagnosis of indeterminate colitis.
Dis Colon Rectum 1991 Oct
PMID:Indeterminate colitis predisposes to perineal complications after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. 191 17


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