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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
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The aim of this study was to compare the immediate postoperative results and the long-term outcome of ileal pouch-anal anastomosis in 94 patients with familial adenomatous polyposis to those in 758 patients with ulcerative colitis. Two colitis patients died after operation (0.3%), but no polyposis patients died. Overall operative complications appeared in 26% and 29% of polyposis and colitis patients, respectively (NS). Reoperation for intestinal obstruction did not differ between the two groups, but sepsis requiring reoperation was more common in colitis patients (6%) than in polyposis patients (0%, p less than 0.04). At follow-up (mean, 3 years), polyposis patients had fewer daytime stools (4.5 stools per day), less nighttime fecal spotting (26%), and less pouchitis (7%) than colitis patients (5.8 stools per day; spotting, 40%; pouchitis, 22%; p less than 0.002). The conclusion was that polyposis patients tolerated the operation better and had less long-term disability than did colitis patients. The data suggest that postoperative sepsis, daytime stooling frequency, nocturnal incontinence, and pouchitis may be, at least in part, disease related and not surgeon or operation related.
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PMID:Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis: comparison of results in familial adenomatous polyposis and chronic ulcerative colitis. 216 96

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

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

The operation consisting of abdominal colectomy, proximal proctectomy, distal mucosal proctectomy, and ileal pouch-anal anastomosis eliminates colorectal mucosal disease, restores transanal defecation, and avoids the need for a permanent abdominal stoma and the wearing of an external appliance. During the 4-year period from January 1981 through December 1984, 369 such operations were done at the Mayo Clinic for either ulcerative colitis (in 336 patients) or polyposis coli (in 33 patients). None of the patients died in the immediate postoperative period. Follow-up data for the initial 188 patients showed the following complications: anastomotic stricture in 12%, pelvic sepsis in 11%, obstruction of the small intestine in 9%, and reservoir ileitis in 7%. A permanent stoma had to be established in 5% of patients. All patients could defecate spontaneously, and 95% had satisfactory continence for stools and gas. This operation seems safe and effective and provides a quality of life superior to that seen after the conventional Brooke ileostomy.
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PMID:Restorative proctocolectomy and ileal reservoir. 395 Dec 58

One hundred eighty-eight patients undergoing abdominal colectomy with distal mucosal proctectomy and endorectal ileal pouch-anal anastomosis were reviewed to assess long-term functional results and to identify factors that might influence them. There was no postoperative mortality, but 10 patients (5.3%) required permanent ileostomy because of postoperative complications or the development of unsuspected Crohn's disease. Immediate postoperative complications, including pelvic sepsis, small bowel obstruction requiring surgery, anastomotic stricture, and ileostomy dysfunction, were observed in 11%, 9%, 14% and 9% of patients, respectively. No males were impotent but nine (9%) developed retrograde ejaculation. Pouchitis occurred in 8% of patients. Among 157 patients assessed at least 60 days after ileostomy closure (mean +/- SD, 375 +/- 216 days), all evacuated their neorectum spontaneously, and stool frequency was 6.0 +/- 2.6 daily and 1.2 +/- 1.3 nightly. While continence was generally good, 2.5% of patients during waking hours and 4.5% during sleep had occasional frank soilage. Moreover, seepage was noted in 25 and 47% of patients during daytime and nighttime, respectively. Both stool frequency and degree of continence improved with time. Patients less than 50 years of age and those with polyposis coli had fewer stools and better continence than those older than 50 or those with ulcerative colitis. It is concluded that ileal "J" pouch-anal anastomosis can be performed safely and will provide acceptable anorectal function without late deterioration.
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PMID:Ileal "J" pouch-anal anastomosis. Clinical outcome. 407 86

Two hundred and seventeen patients, undergoing abdominal colonic and rectal surgery, received after randomization, the following regimen: group A (74 patients): cefotaxime 1 g intravenous at the induction of anaesthesia, the beginning of the resection, 4 and 8 h later; group B (72 patients): cefotaxime in the same regimen associated with ornidazole or metronidazole 0.5 g intravenous at the induction of anaesthesia and 0.5 g intravenous with the last injection of cefotaxime; group C (71 patients):cefotaxime following the same regimen as groups A and B and metronidazole orally 0.5 tds 3 days before surgery. All wounds were assessed daily, until discharge from hospital. Severe sepsis included: septicaemia, peritonitis, intra-abdominal abscess and extra-abdominal infections with death. Non-severe sepsis included all others. All the patients having a history of allergy to beta-lactam antibiotics and those with pre-operative infection were excluded. Mean age of the population was: 64.5 years. Seventy-seven patients had rectal cancer and 82 patients cancer of the colon; Twenty-five patients had inflammatory bowel disease, and in 33 others disease such as polyposis was present. Risk factors of post-operative infection were present in 115 cases (A, 36 patients; B, 37 patients; C, 42 patients). All three groups were very well matched for age, sex, type of intervention and diagnosis. Non-infectious complications appeared in 56 patients. Sepsis developed in 76 patients (A, 27 patients; B, 27 patients; C, 22 patients, no significant difference). Severe sepsis occurred in 14 patients (A, 6 patients; B, 4 patients; C, 4 patients, no significant difference) and in 62 patients non severe sepsis (A, 21 patients; B, 23 patients; C, 18 patients, no significant difference). Post-operative peritonitis was not seen. This study suggests that cefotaxime alone 4 g peri-operatively is useful in prophylaxis during rectal and colonic surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Prophylactic use of cefotaxime in colonic and rectal surgery. 609 48

Six patients with polyposis coli and five with chronic ulcerative colitis underwent total colectomy and mucosal proctectomy with preservation of the anal sphincter and levator ani muscle. An ileal reservoir, constructed from the terminal ileum, is brought out through the anal sphincter for anastomosis to to the anus at the dentate line. Two patients in the series had a three-limb reservoir with anastomosis of a short efferent ileal limb to the anus (Parks technique). Nine patients had a two-limb J-shaped reservoir with the apex of the reservoir anastomosed to the anus (Utsunomiya technique). All patients had a temporary defunctioning ileostomy. There were no deaths. Two patients suffered from severe infection within the rectal muscle cuff. One resolved completely with spontaneous drainage into the reservoir; the other had continuing sepsis and eventually required excision of the anus and conversion to a continent ileostomy. All patients remain in good general condition with no disturbance of urinary or sexual function. Continence is satisfactory in all patients but two wear a pad at night. All evacuate their reservoirs spontaneously: none requires the use of a catheter. For most patients stool frequency varies from four to eight times daily but two patients have more frequent bowel motions. Colitis patients have more frequent bowel activity than those with polyposis. Three patients take Imodium tablets to lessen bowel frequency. The operation should be reserved for specialized centres and is still under trial; however, it appears likely to become the operation of choice for all patients with polyposis coli and for many patients with chronic ulcerative colitis.
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PMID:Proctocolectomy without ileostomy: ileo-anal anastomosis with an ileal reservoir. 658 43

Cowden syndrome is a rare syndrome of chromosome abnormalities presenting with polyposis of digestive tracts, characteristic skin eruption and neuromuscular disorders. A 56-year-old male patient with Cowden syndrome underwent upper abdominal surgery under general anesthesia followed by post-operative epidural analgesia with buprenorphine. Proposed total gastrectomy was not performed because of massive invasion of carcinoma in the abdominal cavity and gastrojejunostomy was done instead. The anesthesia was satisfactory with inhalation of nitrous oxide and enflurane with intravenous vecuronium. Neuromuscular monitoring with electric twitch-responses of the hand showed normal patterns throughout the anesthesia. The recovery from anesthesia and neuromuscular blockade was prompt. Intermittent epidural buprenorphine, twice a day (0.2 mg of buprenorphine in 9 ml of normal saline for one time) was started just after the recovery of anesthesia and continued for four days. Delirium occurred two days after beginning epidural buprenorphine and disappeared three days after its discontinuation. The patient died 52 days after the operation from obstructive jaundice and sepsis. The delirium, therefore, seems to have been caused by buprenorphine possibly due to its impaired metabolism by the liver. Although we did not experience any abnormal neuromuscular reactions to vecuronium or anesthetic agents, it is important to perform preoperative neuromuscular examinations and peri-operative monitoring in the anesthetic management of a patient with this syndrome.
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PMID:[Anesthetic management of a patient with Cowden syndrome]. 773 7

Restorative proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis is clearly the operation of choice for ulcerative colitis and polyposis coli. Not so clear is the best way to perform this operation. The technique used at the University of Pittsburgh is described. Utilising a meticulous mucosectomy with the patient in a prone jack-knife position, the ileal pouch-anal anastomosis was successfully performed in a series of 50 consecutive patients which included six with orthotopic liver graft, nine with a prior Hartmann procedure, ten with fulminant colitis and six with cancer. All patients were fully continent of stools, and except for one, had a good functional result. Complications were minor and included pelvic sepsis (n = 2), ileostomy-related complications (n = 6) and pouchitis (n = 7).
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PMID:An analysis of 50 cases of restorative proctocolectomy. 818 77

During the period from 1974 to June 2000 we used the straight ileo-anal Soave pull-through to treat 42 patients (24 affected by total colonic aganglionosis [TCA], 10 with ulcerative colitis and 8 with familial polyposis). The aim of this paper is to show that this operation, associated with total colectomy, is highly recommended, causing a lower number of complications when compared to the various "reservoir" techniques. The mean age of the 24 patients with TCA at the time of the pull-through was 2.8 years; in the ulcerative colitis group, it was 14.3 years and in the familial polyposis group 27.2 years. We always used an ileo-anal deferred anastomosis and never performed temporary loop-diverting ileostomy at the time of the pull-through. In the TCA patients we had no immediate or long-term serious post-operative complications: ileal adaptation, after a frequency of 10 - 12 liquid stools a day, showed a gradual, constant and in some cases amazing improvement in all children. Two years after surgery, the mean stool frequency was 3.6 per 24 hours with no significant differences between the 3 main groups; only 4 children still presented with occasional soiling. After pull-through, all children showed normal growth curves in the long term. There was no malabsorption, no serious electrolyte imbalance, no perianal excoriation, no strictures or intestinal obstruction; their quality of life was considered more than satisfactory by the children's families. We have no direct experience with the various ileal "reservoir" techniques for ulcerative colitis and ileal polyposis nor with colon-sparing operations for TCA; as reported in the literature, all these surgical procedures seem to have a higher number of complications such as pelvic sepsis, pouchitis, enterocolitis, etc. compared with our series; we therefore confirm that total colectomy with the straight ileo-anal Soave pull-through is our treatment of choice, as it is simpler to perform and has fewer short- and long-term complications.
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PMID:Total colectomy and straight ileo-anal soave endorectal pull-through: personal experience with 42 cases. 1171 70


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