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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Univariate and multivariate analyses have been used to assess the influence of 14 variables on the results of 65 consecutive ileoanal pouch procedures over 5 years. There were nine failures requiring intubation, ileostomy or pouch excision. There was a significant association between failure and pelvic sepsis (P less than 0.05, n = 8), endoanal mucosectomy (P less than 0.05, n = 7), preservation of a long rectal cuff (P less than 0.05, n = 5) and lack of experience with the operation (P less than 0.05, n = 8). Of 49 patients with preoperative evidence of ulcerative colitis, three are now known to have Crohn's disease. Functional outcome was significantly impaired in patients who developed pelvic sepsis (P less than 0.01) or a postoperative fistula (P less than 0.05), and who had an endoanal mucosectomy (P less than 0.05). Success with ileoanal pouch reconstruction increases with experience. Avoidance of sepsis is associated with a lower failure rate, improved functional results and reduced hospital stay. Preliminary colectomy is also advised to exclude Crohn's disease if the diagnosis is in question.
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PMID:Multivariate analysis of factors influencing the results of restorative proctocolectomy. 276 17

Patients with total colonic ulcerative colitis or familial polyposis traditionally require a proctocolectomy. In an effort to preserve the normal pathway for defecation and avoid the nuisance of an abdominal stoma, a continence-preserving procedure involving a pelvic reservoir has been performed at the University of Minnesota Hospitals on 120 patients. The majority were operated on for colonic ulcerative colitis. There were no deaths. The mean hospital stay after restorative proctocolectomy was 10 days and after ileostomy takedown the mean stay was 7 days. Functional results were assessed in 52 patients. Daytime bowel movements averaged 6.4 and night-time movements 1.4. Major daytime incontinence occurred in 6% of the patients, 21% had moderate soiling at night and 70% wore a perineal pad in the evening. Ninety-two percent of the patients expressed satisfaction with the procedure. The most serious complication was pelvic sepsis. It occurred in nine patients, six of whom required subsequent surgery. The Parks S pouch provides a means of maintaining anal continence. This series and others have shown that young, healthy, well-motivated persons will benefit most from a restorative proctocolectomy.
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PMID:Proctocolectomy and ileoanal anastomosis with an S pouch: functional results. 282 15

Of 84 patients who underwent restorative proctocolectomy with an ileoanal reservoir in 21 Italian departments of surgery, 51 had ulcerative colitis, 32 familial polyposis and 1 intractable constipation. Follow-up information is available for all 58 patients who had their ileostomy closed, the length of follow-up ranging between 2 and 78 months. There were no operative deaths. A failure rate (i.e. excision of the pouch) of 3 per cent was observed. Sepsis was the most common postoperative complication, and was most often related to ileoanal anastomosis dehiscence (15 per cent), followed by small-bowel obstruction requiring laparotomy (10 per cent). Clinical 'pouchitis' occurred in 14 per cent of patients after ileostomy closure. The average frequency of defaecation was four motions per 24 h; evacuation was spontaneous in all patients and only 5 per cent complained of troublesome faecal soiling while 34 per cent had occasional incontinence to flatus and mucus. Patients with a short or absent rectal cuff had a lower rate of incontinence (30 versus 48 per cent, difference not statistically significant) without any increase in the frequency of genito-urinary disorders. None of the two most used reservoirs, the J (n = 40) and S pouch (n = 17) showed significant superiority in terms of bowel frequency and continence. Incontinence was more likely in patients whose ileostomy closure had been delayed for more than one year.
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PMID:Clinical and functional results after restorative proctocolectomy. 283 77

Of 518 patients undergoing the ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA), 17 (13 with chronic ulcerative colitis [CUC] and four with familial polyposis coli [FPC] ) also had a total of 22 cancers of the colorectum. Tumors were concentrated distally (rectum 6; sigmoid colon 5; proximal colon 11) and were diagnosed preoperatively in eight patients. Histologic grade and stage were as follows: grade I, 36 percent; II, 23 percent; III, 23 percent; IV, 18 percent; stage A, 5 percent; B1, 32 percent; B2, 18 percent; C1 and C2, 45 percent. Median hospital stay was 17 days with no operative mortality. Relaparotomy was required in 35 percent (sepsis in four patients; obstruction in two) and minor procedures were done in 12 percent (anastomotic dilatation in one; rectovaginal fistula in one). Mean frequency of defecation was 6.4/day, 1.0/night; incidence of minor seepage, 17 percent (day), 50 percent night); incidence of pouchitis, 8 percent; intermittent dyspareunia, 17 percent of six women. One patient died from hepatic metastases nine months after operation. IPAA should be considered in favorable cancers complicating CUC or FPC, although it may be contraindicated in advanced rectal cancer, and may be unsuitable in advanced proximal cancer.
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PMID:Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for chronic ulcerative colitis and familial polyposis coli complicated by adenocarcinoma. 283 17

Thirty-two patients were treated with colectomy, mucosal proctectomy, and straight ileoanal anastomosis. Mucosal dissection was performed from the abdominal side, and an anal mucosal brim of 1-2 cm was preserved. Diverting ileostomy was not used, and four patients developed anastomotic leak with pelvic sepsis. Three patients had take-down of the anastomosis for reasons related to the operative method. The remaining patients are all completely continent day and night and have a median stool frequency of 6/24 h 1 year after the operation. The frequency was significantly higher in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) than in patients with familial polyposis (FP). No dysplasia, ulceration, or stricture formation was found in the preserved mucosa in the UC patients. Regrowth of polyps in the mucosal brim occurred in 10 of 13 FP patients, with atypia in 1. The FP patients had more late complications attributed to extracolonic manifestations of the FP disease.
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PMID:Straight ileoanal anastomosis with preserved anal mucosa for ulcerative colitis and familial polyposis. 284 98

Adrenal hemorrhage is uncommon and usually associated with severe stress, sepsis, or anticoagulant therapy. The association of adrenal hemorrhage and acute ulcerative colitis is rare, and is probably related to exogenous therapy with ACTH. The case of a 29-year-old woman who was hospitalized with severe ulcerative colitis, treated with ACTH, and who developed bilateral adrenal hemorrhage is presented. The difficulties of diagnosis and management are discussed. A review of the relevant literature concerning the pathophysiology of adrenal hemorrhage is presented also.
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PMID:Bilateral adrenal hemorrhage during ACTH treatment of ulcerative colitis. Report of a case and review of the literature. 300 34

In a series of 500 patients who underwent ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for ulcerative colitis or polyposis coli, significant intra-abdominal or pelvic sepsis developed in 30 (6%). Among the patients who did not require laparotomy because they responded to treatment with antibiotics or local drainage (surgical or radiologically guided) or both, no pouches were excised and the ileostomy closure rate (92%) was similar to that for the patients who did not have sepsis. The 17 patients whose sepsis did require laparotomy had a high rate of pouch excision (41%) (p less than 0.0001) and a low rate of ileostomy closure (29%) (p less than 0.0001). Factors identified as possibly associated with severe sepsis included female gender and ulcerative colitis complicated by toxicity or malignancy.
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PMID:Postoperative intra-abdominal and pelvic sepsis complicating ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. 318 75

Between July 1973 and October 1984, we performed proctectomy either as part of a primary proctocolectomy or as a secondary staged procedure in 388 patients with ulcerative colitis and in 39 patients with Crohn's disease. The proctectomies were performed using a two-team synchronous approach. An intersphincteric or perimuscular technique was employed. All perineal wounds were closed and drained by suction drainage and the pelvic peritoneum was closed in all cases. Two patients died in the early postoperative period, one from a pulmonary embolus and one from sepsis. Three patients had to be reexplored for postoperative hemorrhage, in all cases from a branch of the superior hemorrhoidal artery. Postoperative perineal hematoma developed in two patients and perineal abscess developed in four patients which necessitated opening of the perineal skin wound. Nonhealing of the perineal wound occurred in 3 of 388 patients with ulcerative colitis and in 5 of 39 patients with Crohn's disease. No perineal dehiscence or hernias were seen. Postoperatively, one man was permanently impotent and two had prolonged but temporary impotence. Three patients had retrograde ejaculation at last follow-up.
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PMID:Proctectomy for inflammatory bowel disease. 348 10

The outcome of mucosal proctectomy with ileoanal anastomosis in patients with polyposis coli has not been well studied. A series of 25 patients with polyposis treated at the Mount Sinai Hospital over a period of ten years is reported. The mean age of the patients was 23 years. Early postoperative complications were present in seven patients and consisted of thrombophlebitis (three), pelvic sepsis (three), and retraction of the anastomosis (one). Intestinal obstruction requiring laparotomy occurred in another five patients. Twenty-three patients were followed for a mean of 47 months after closure of the ileostomy. Ninety-one percent are satisfied with the operative results. The mean number of bowel movements per 24 hours is 6.0. All patients are continent, but eight have occasional episodes of rectal seepage at night. Nearly 50 percent require some antidiarrheal medication. New adenomatous polyps have developed just above the dentate line in four patients. Patients with polyposis coli seem to have fewer serious complications requiring excision of the ileoanal anastomosis than patients with ulcerative colitis. They also should have lifelong surveillance of the entire gastrointestinal tract even after total colectomy with ileoanal anastomosis.
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PMID:Familial polyposis coli. Results of mucosal proctectomy with ileoanal anastomosis. 359 59

To evaluate the outcome of surgery for ulcerative colitis in pediatric and adolescent patients, the experience at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation was reviewed retrospectively. Fifty-nine percent of the patients presented with acute toxic colitis and sepsis; 94 percent underwent staged procedures with creation of a temporary or permanent ileostomy. Sepsis was the most frequent postoperative complication (38 percent), and accounted for all three deaths (5 percent). Long-term disability was minimal, and 90 percent of the patients were fully active at the time of follow-up.
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PMID:Surgery for ulcerative colitis in the pediatric population. Indications, treatment, and follow-up. 365 87


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