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Query: UMLS:C0476089 (
endometrial cancer
)
11,379
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The widespread availability and use of stapling devices have changed colorectal surgery. In 1980, Knight and Griffen developed the "double-staple" technique, using a circular stapler to transect a linear rectal staple line. This eliminated the need for a hand-sewn, distal purse string, which was sometimes difficult or even impossible to accurately place low in the pelvis. To evaluate this procedure, the authors have reviewed their results with the double-staple technique over the past 5 years. One hundred four patients underwent this procedure between 1985 and 1990 at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital (Philadelphia, PA). There were 60 men and 44 women, with a mean age of 62.4 years. Seventy-two patients underwent operation for carcinoma of the rectum or sigmoid. Thirty-five of these had preoperative radiation therapy. Other diagnoses included 1)
diverticular disease
, 2) rectal prolapse, 3) villous adenoma, 4)
endometrial carcinoma
, 5) fistula, 6) stricture, 7) Crohn's disease, 8) colonic endometriosis, 9) lymphoma, 10) ovarian carcinoma, and 11) ulcerative colitis. Incomplete "donuts" were observed in 5 patients. Diverting colostomies were performed in 23 patients, ileostomies in 3. Postoperative complications relating to the double-staple technique itself included a rectovaginal fistula in 1 patient. There were 3 clinical leaks (2.8%), all treated nonoperatively. No strictures were observed. As previously observed, the authors believe the double-staple technique offers certain advantages over traditional, hand-sewn and stapled anastomoses, for instance: 1) there is significantly less contamination, 2) the anastomosis is technically easier, and 3) bowel segments of different diameters can be easily anastomosed.
...
PMID:The double-staple technique in colorectal anastomoses: a critical review. 158 88