Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a group of 160 patients with Crohn's disease involving the colon, there were seven patients with toxic dilatation, four with granulomatous colitis and three with ileocolitis, all successfully treated without mortality. This complications is more common than previously recognized in Crohn's colitis. In Crohn's disease, toxic dilatation is less likely to proceed to perforation of the bowel, because of the nature of the pathology and is more likely to respond to conservative measures: intubation, with decompression, corticotropin, steroids and high-dose antibiotic administration. Although patients do recover from this life-threatening complication with conservative management, the majority of patients, if not all, will ultimately come to surgical excision of the colon. If surgery is mandatory, it should be carried out early, rather than late, in the patient who is failing to respond to medical therapy, certainly before the development of perforation, massive hemorrhage, or gram negative sepsis with shock. The surgical therapy will depend upon the state of the bowel at laparotomy. Thus, an intact bowel in a young patient, would favor subtotal colectomy or proctocolectomy; a sealed perforation, a diverting ileostomy with skin level colostomy decompression as suggested by Turnbull and a free perforation, the minimum adequate procedure which will tide the patient over the early postoperative period. Diverting ileostomy alone has been effective in two of our patients but should be avoided in ulcerative colitis. The critically ill patient with the ominous finding of "disintegrating colitis" and multiple leaks, will require nothing less than total radical excision of the diseased bowel in the hope of immediate salvage.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease of the colon. III. Toxic dilatation of the colon in Crohn's colitis. 16 16

Most patients with Crohn's disease will require at least one operation for that condition, either an operation to correct a complication of Crohn's disease (abscess, fistula, or bleeding) or for intractability (the failure of medical management to provide relief of disabling symptoms). Proper timing of surgery and careful preoperative preparation of the patient with special attention to control sepsis and to improving nutritional status will make the operation safer. Because of the tendency for Crohn's disease to progress despite medical or surgical therapy recurrences after operation are common and the surgical procedure should be limited to correcting the complication at hand. For Crohn's disease of the small bowel or of the terminal ileum and right colon, a conservative intestinal resection and anastomosis is usually the procedure of choice; nonresective procedures such as bypass and strictureplasty are useful in special situations. More than half of the patients so treated will eventually develop recurrence that may require one or more subsequent operations. The adverse effects of resection will be minimized by conservative surgery and by careful long-term management of the altered intestinal physiology. Some patients with Crohn's colitis have limited colonic disease where continence can be preserved by resection and anastomosis, although the recurrence rate is high. Total proctocolectomy for Crohn's colitis provides much better assurance of long-term freedom from recurrence but at the cost to the patient of a permanent ileostomy. Surgery for Crohn's disease is not curative but offers effective palliation for the complications of this progressive and poorly understood condition.
...
PMID:Surgical therapy for Crohn's disease. 264 19

The rate of perineal wound healing was assessed in a series of 112 patients undergoing proctectomy for Crohn's colitis. Healing was impaired in patients with a high fistula-in-ano or a rectovaginal fistula pre-operatively, faecal contamination and postoperative perineal sepsis. Early healing (within 12 weeks) occurred in 63 per cent of the patients. Healing was delayed by over one year in 21 patients, and in 10 patients the perineal wounds never healed.
...
PMID:Delayed perineal wound healing after proctectomy for Crohn's colitis. 394 7

In an effort to avoid the failures of perineal wound healing that are common after proctectomy, 57 patients who had abdominoperineal resection of the rectum or total proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis (35 patients), Crohn's colitis (12), or carcinoma (10) had primary closure of the levator muscles and perineal tissues. No attempt was made to approximate the pelvic peritoneum. The small bowel was allowed to fill the pelvic space, which was also drained by suction catheters brought out through the lower abdominal wall. The skin and subcutaneous tissues were allowed to heal by secondary intention in seven patients who had excessive preoperative perineal sepsis from fistulas, deep fissures, and abscesses. All seven wounds healed within 2 months. Of the other 50 patients, whose wounds were closed to the skin, 48 were discharged with completely healed perineal wounds. Two patients had sterile pelvic hematomas that drained through the perineum and delayed wound healing 1 month and 2 months. There were no postoperative perineal, pelvic, or intraabdominal abscesses. Immediate postoperative ambulation was allowed. There was no increased short-term or long-term incidence of small bowel obstruction related to this procedure, nor did perineal hernia occur after long-term observation (mean: 5.3 years). This method of accomplishing perineal wound healing is simpler, safer, more comfortable, and remarkably effective in eliminating the prolonged morbidity of an unhealed perineal wound. It is superior to any other reported method of managing the perineal wound in patients with inflammatory bowel disease and may be applicable to the treatment of cancer without compromising the chances for cure.
...
PMID:Improved management of the perineal wound after proctectomy. 407 88

Operations for intraabdominal abscess were performed in 46 (20 percent) of 230 patients with Crohn's colitis and ileocolitis treated at the Mount Sinai Hospital during the decade 1964 to 1974. Internal and external fistulas, intestinal obstruction, and abdominal mass occurred significantly more often in patients with intraabdominal abscess, while only overt bleeding was significantly less common. Abscesses were equally divided between 23 patients who had undergone previous surgery and 23 cases of spontaneous onset. IN ileocolitis, the most frequent site of origin was the terminal ileum with right lower quadrant abscess, as opposed to a sigmoid origin in colitis with presentation in the left lower quadrant. There was no mortality among 24 patients treated with simple drainage, usually for superficial abscess, but enterocutaneous fistulas persisted in 5 of these patients (21 percent). Four of 11 patients (35 percent) died after undergoing bypass or ileostomy diversion. Among the 31 patients surviving either of these procedures, 18 (60 percent) required subsequent resection of the diseased bowel. By contrast, among 11 patients treated with primary en bloc resection plus drainage, there was only 1 death (9 percent) and no abscess recurrence or chronic enterocutaneous fistula formation during a follow-up period of 1 to 4 years. The high mortality rate after bypass may be explained by the more serious nature of the disease and the preexisting deep intraabdominal abscess and postoperative sepsis. Simple extraperitoneal drainage is a safe procedure associated with an extremely low mortality; however, when feasible, resection of the diseased bowel seems to be the treatment of choice for abscess in patients with Crohn's colitis and ileocolitis.
...
PMID:Intraabdominal abscess in Crohn's (ileo) colitis. 709 6

Six patients with Crohn's disease had colonic intraluminal multilobulated masses detected on barium enema. Four had Crohn's colitis and two ileocolitis. The mean duration of disease was four and eight tenths years. Three patients underwent surgery and three had colonoscopy with multiple biopsies and cytology. Pseudopolypoid inflammatory tissue was found in each case. One patient died after a prolonged postoperative course due to sepsis and abscess formation. No surgery was performed in three patients and follow-up colonoscopic examinations at four and a half years revealed no change in these findings. The presence of an intraluminal colonic mass in Crohn's colitis may mimic a neoplasm. If surveillance with x-ray, endoscopic biopsies and cytology reveals pseudopolypoid inflammatory tissue then surgery is not mandatory. Pseudopolypoid inflammatory tissue has never been associated with carcinoma.
...
PMID:Giant pseudopolyps in Crohn's colitis. A nonoperative approach. 731 24

Indications for surgery, operative procedures, and the early and late sequelae of surgery for Crohn's ileocolitis have been studied in a series of 250 patients admitted to Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, between 1960 and 1975. The most common indications for surgery were small-bowel obstruction in ileocolitis, and medical intractability in Crohn's colitis. Early postoperative complications (within 30 days of surgery) followed 79 operative procedures (15%), and were most commonly wound infections (7%), intra-abdominal abscess (2.6%), and postoperative intestinal obstruction (2.4%). Late sequelae (30 days to 15 years following surgery) included intestinal obstruction in 36 patients, external fistulae in 41 patients, and ileostomy problems in 19 patients, and were most frequently caused by recurrent disease in the terminal portion of the ileum. Mortality following surgery for Crohn's disease may be subdivided into two groups, early and late. All eight early postoperative deaths were secondary to sepsis, present in every instance prior to operation. The eight late deaths were caused by metastatic cancer in six and recurrent disease in two. Resection of excluded segments of bowel, as in four of the patients in this series, will reduce the late cancer risk.
...
PMID:Surgery and its sequelae in Crohn's colitis and ileocolitis. 746 65

Most patients with Crohn's disease have to be operated on. Necessity to loose some amount of the intestine and time-point of the surgical intervention may be derived from the irreversible cascade of the inflammatory process and the limitations of the conservative treatment. In ileocecal disease indications for surgery are represented by stenotic and/or penetrating complications of the inflamed bowel, whereas in Crohn's colitis acute or terminal medical refractority is predominating. Standard-procedures result from constantly definable patterns of the disease manifestation: ileocecal resection and colectomy/-proctocolectomy. In segmental colitis sometimes "resections within Crohn's" may be adequate in a first attempt to avoid anticipating the natural course by surgical means. In these cases the further prognosis depends on the treatment possibilities of the remaining colon. In contrast, true recurrence is a new inflammation of the neoterminal ileum and may indicate repeated resections. The frequence decreases with the number of resections. Nevertheless nutritional status is restored even by multiple resections, whereas specific functional sequelae of the resection--distal resection- and dehydration syndromes--are well treatable mostly. In the case of appropriate timing of the operation and the reoperation operative morbidity and mortality are remarkable low today resulting in an almost normal life expectancy. Most important as negative prognostic factor remains sepsis resulting from pre-existing or postoperative infectious complications. Keeping this in mind experimental pharmaco-therapy to delay the operation and not profoundly substantiated tendencies to minimize surgery are to be considered only with critical scepticism. At the moment, future research is thought to be more successful in focussing prophylaxis of ileal recurrence than avoiding surgery.
...
PMID:[Surgical concepts in Crohn disease of the terminal ileum and colon]. 962 90

Ileal pouch anal anastomosis (IPAA) is associated with complications in a significant number of patients, including ileal-anal separation, anal stricture, pouchitis, pelvic sepsis, and small bowel obstruction. In most cases, these complications may be successfully treated using either medical or surgical therapy and do not result in long-term pouch dysfunction. Important preventative measures include accrual of experience or creation of a team with experienced surgical leadership and scrupulous selection of patients who have no features of Crohn's disease. Despite these precautions, 5% to 15% of patients will develop chronic pouch dysfunction and pouch failure requiring diversion with or without excision of the pouch. Medical measures, such as antibiotics, immunomodulators, and biologic agents, and surgical measures such as advancement flap anoplasty may be attempted to salvage pouch function and are successful in more than 50% of cases. Indeterminate colitis does not preclude IPAA; however, Crohn's colitis is absolute contraindication for same. Patients who require colectomy and are suspected for any reason to have CD may undergo ileorectal anastomosis with preservation of anorectal continence and excellent functional results.
...
PMID:Complications of ileal pouch anal anastomosis. 1760 76