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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty-five patients were operated on at the Brigham and Women's Hospital for colonic diverticulitis complicating treated renal failure during the period 1951 to 1983. Twelve patients had functioning renal allografts (eight cadaver, four living-related); 13 were on dialysis therapy. Six patients had polycystic kidney disease. The majority of patients had acute abdominal pain. Four had histories of chronic abdominal pain; nondiagnostic exploratory laparotomies were performed on two of these patients, who developed localized tenderness. The overall mortality in this series was 28 percent, with
sepsis
being the most common cause of death. Six of seven patients who died had free colonic perforations at surgery. Mortality correlated with age, with six of 14 patients (43 percent) over age 50 dying, as compared with one of 11 patients (9 percent) under age 50. There was no correlation between survival rate and type of surgery performed, dose of prednisone or azathioprine used, or type of treatment received for renal failure.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1985 Nov
PMID:Surgery for diverticulitis in renal failure. 390 14
Of two hundred patients undergoing proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, all but nine have had temporary diverting ileostomies. Of these nine patients, eight had successful results. One patient developed abdominal
sepsis
due to jejunal volvulus and perforation after she had returned home, and at surgery the pouch was excised. Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis without a temporary diverting ileostomy can be performed safely by surgeons experienced with this procedure in carefully selected patients.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1986 Jan
PMID:Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis without temporary, diverting ileostomy. 394 Aug 3
Endoanal mucosal proctectomy with preservation of the anal sphincters has been employed as an alternative to the traditional method of rectal excision in 23 patients with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. Ten patients in whom the anal canal was left open and drained had uneventful postoperative courses. Of the remaining 13 patients in whom the top of the anal remnant was oversewn, four had local pelvic
sepsis
that resolved in a few weeks' time and one patient had a pelvic hematoma requiring relaparotomy and sphincter muscle excision. Postoperative disturbances in bladder or sexual function did not occur in any of the patients. At the latest follow-up (mean 21 months), all patients were fully satisfied with the result of the operation. On proctoscopic examination, an anal remnant, measuring approximately 3 cm from the anal verge, could be demonstrated. Its upper end had healed with a fibrous scar in 50 percent of the patients, whereas a small area of friable granulation tissue, sometimes with a short sinus tract was still observed in the others. The persistence of such lesions was associated with minor mucous discharge occasionally escaping from the anal canal. Biopsies disclosed regeneration of cylindric and transitional types of epithelium. The fate of these epithelial remnants remains to be seen. Endoanal mucosal proctectomy appears to be an attractive alternative to the conventional technique. It prevents a great deal of morbidity and enhances postoperative rehabilitation.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1985 Jan
PMID:Mucosal proctectomy and ileostomy as an alternative to conventional proctectomy. 397 97
Sigmoid diverticulitis with perforation and generalized peritonitis is a grave complication of diverticular disease. To compare accurately the results of two operative approaches--proximal colostomy with drainage and proximal colostomy with resection or exteriorization--the authors assessed the clinical and pathologic features of 121 consecutive patients with perforating sigmoid diverticulitis. There were no differences between treatment groups in age, sex, mean duration of symptoms, clinical presentation, number of coexistent diseases, type of peritonitis or chronic corticosteroid use. Overall mortality for emergency operation was 12 percent. Mortality was significantly greater (P less than 0.05) among the 31 patients treated by colostomy and drainage (26 percent) than among the 90 patients treated by colostomy and resection or exteriorization (7 percent). Seven of the nine patients who died from persistent
sepsis
had undergone colostomy and drainage. Four clinical factors were found to be predictive of mortality (P less than 0.05): persistent postoperative
sepsis
, fecal peritonitis, preoperative hypotension, and prolonged duration of symptoms. These factors identified a subgroup of patients who, because of an increased risk of death, would be likely to benefit from the more complete eradication of the septic focus that is achieved by colostomy and resection.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1985 Feb
PMID:Sigmoid diverticulitis with perforation and generalized peritonitis. 397 9
Colouterine fistula complicating diverticulitis is rare. Our experience with two patients, one with chronic vaginal discharge and the other with acute overwhelming
sepsis
, emphasizes the wide spectrum of clinical presentations that may accompany this entity. In patients with chronic symptoms, surgery is indicated to forestall further local infectious complications, and a single-stage sigmoid resection without hysterectomy may be adequate. If malignancy cannot be excluded, a single-stage en bloc resection of the uterus and colon is the procedure of choice. Hysterectomy may also be mandatory to extirpate a nidus of acute infection. When severe local inflammation or obstruction mandate urgent operation, a two-stage procedure involving resection and end colostomy, followed by reanastomosis at a later time, is safest and most effective.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1985 May
PMID:Colouterine fistula secondary to diverticulitis. 399 53
This is the report of a patient with gangrene of the skin and subcutaneous tissue of the scrotum and base of the penis secondary to diverticulitis of the sigmoid colon. Due to high mortality in such patients, the early, rapid, and radical debridement of all devitalized tissues and prompt recognition of the source of
sepsis
is of utmost importance. Computed tomography (CT) scanning facilitates delineating the extent of disease. Anatomy of the perineal body and pathways of spread are discussed.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1985 Jul
PMID:Gangrene of male external genitalia in a patient with colorectal disease. Anatomic pathways of spread. 401 14
This report reviews the clinical presentation, operative management, and survival in 120 infants with intestinal atresia and stenosis treated from 1972 to 1984. Duodenal atresia occurred in 39 neonates and duodenal stenosis in 19. Thirty-two infants had severe associated anomalies. Operative management included duodenoduodenostomy in 47 infants, duodenotomy and web excision in four, and duodenojejunostomy in seven. Jejunoileal atresia occurred in 49 infants and stenosis in three. Six infants had cystic fibrosis and nine had gastroschisis. Operative therapy included wide proximal resection and end-to-end anastomosis in 18 infants, minimal resection with antimesenteric tapering enteroplasty and anastomosis in 14 neonates, and resection with temporary enterostomies in 20 infants. Twenty-nine infants (56%) required total parenteral nutrition.
Colon
atresia occurred in 11 infants and stenosis in one. Initial end-colostomy with subsequent resection and anastomosis was performed in 11 infants while one underwent a primary resection. The survival rate was 91% for duodenal defects, 87% for jejunoileal cases, and 100% for colonic anomalies. Death is currently caused by severe associated anomalies in infants with duodenal atresia and
sepsis
and total parenteral nutrition-related cholestasis with progressive liver failure in instances of jejunoileal atresia.
...
PMID:Intestinal atresia and stenosis: analysis of survival in 120 cases. 404 43
Sixteen selected patients with rectal procidentia, anal incontinence, or both were treated by the insertion of a Dacron impregnated Silastic sling at the Lahey Clinic between 1981 and 1984. The indications for operation were incontinence in 14 patients, procidentia with incontinence in one patient, and procidentia alone in one patient. No operative deaths occurred. Immediate complications included urinary retention in the three patients and hematoma in one patient. Late complications included infection, requiring removal of the Silastic sling in four patients; however, two of these patients underwent subsequent successful reinsertion of the sling after control of local
sepsis
. Among patients for whom follow-up data were available, satisfaction with the results of this procedure were excellent in two patients, good in six, fair in two, and poor in one. Sphincter repair with a Silastic sling is a safe, reliable alternative in the treatment of selected patients with anal incontinence or rectal procidentia.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1985 Nov
PMID:Sphincter repair with a Silastic sling for anal incontinence and rectal procidentia. 405 2
Colonic necrosis is a rare complication of peripancreatic
sepsis
following acute pancreatitis. Three patients with colonic necrosis associated with extensive retroperitoneal suppuration are reported. The pathogenesis of this syndrome may be explained by the tendency of pancreatic abscesses to extend widely in the retroperitoneum. Management is discussed, emphasizing the need for an aggressive surgical approach and multiple operations.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1985 Dec
PMID:Colonic necrosis in acute pancreatitis. A complication of massive retroperitoneal suppuration. 406 56
In a prospective randomized clinical trial, 103 patients undergoing elective colorectal surgery received either cefoxitin or a combination of metronidazole and gentamicin. Six of 52 patients in the cefoxitin group (11.5 per cent) and six of 48 patients in the metronidazole/gentamicin group (12.5 per cent) developed serious wound infections. Two patients (3.8 per cent) in the cefoxitin group and one patient (2.1 per cent) in the metronidazole/gentamicin group developed deep
sepsis
. These results suggest that cefoxitin is as effective as the combination of metronidazole and gentamicin for prophylaxis against serious postoperative septic complications.
Dis
Colon
Rectum 1983 Oct
PMID:A comparison of intravenous cefoxitin and a combination of gentamicin and metronidazole as prophylaxis in colorectal surgery. 634 50
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