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Query: UMLS:C1510475 (
diverticular disease
)
2,138
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The course of 132 patients with documented acute diverticulitis was analyzed: 99 patients treated medically and 33 patients treated surgically were followed for an average of 9.2 years. Seventy-three per cent of the medical group and 79% of the surgical group had no further symptoms or hospital admissions as a result of their
diverticular disease
once they were recovered from the acute episode. For three-quarters of the patients, therefore, acute diverticulitis occurred as a single episode that responded to either medical or surgical management. Considering the morbidity and cost to the patient, the treatment of the patient recovered from acute diverticulitis should be medical, with operation
reserved
for complications.
...
PMID:Medical and surgical therapy in diverticular disease: a comparative study. 96 66
The aim of surgery in the management of diverticulitis and complicated
diverticulosis
is to remove the disease process as quickly as possible. This approach reduces the likelihood of complications and often avoids the necessity of multistage procedures. Indications for resection include failure of a first attack to subside, recurrent attacks, and free perforation with spreading peritonitis. Three-stage procedures should be
reserved
for extremely serious disease. Other complications requiring surgery are fistula, obstruction, and massive and uncontrolled bleeding. Massive bleeding is caused by diffuse colonic diverticulosis and is rarely associated with diverticulitis. Abdominal mass, obstruction, or recurrent episodes of slight bleeding should suggest the possibility of underlying tumor and are compelling indications for early resection.
...
PMID:Surgical management of colonic diverticulitis and complicated diverticulosis. 108 13
Diverticular disease
of the large bowel is very common in Western societies. The clinical pattern reaches from uncomplicated
diverticular disease
to acute peridiverticulitis, that ultimately afflicts about one in four patients having colonic diverticulosis. The illness may be indolent or fulminant, depending on the degree of colonic spillage and its containment. Therapy is usually medical and consists of "resting" the bowel, administering antibiotics and analgetics. Surgery is
reserved
for recurrent acute attacks, diffuse peritonitis, abscesses, fistulas, severe diverticular hemorrhage or obstruction. A diet rich in fibers reduces infectious complications.
...
PMID:[Internistic therapy of acute diverticulitis]. 132 Jul 72
Eight years' experience in the treatment of the septic complications of
diverticular disease
of the colon is examined and 44 cases treated in the period 1980-1988 are considered. The Hartman procedure gave good results in the majority of cases; other procedures such as drainage with colostomy, or anastomosis resection during a single intervention are
reserved
for particular cases. In addition, on examining the case histories and the current literature it seems that it is correct to treat DD (
diverticular disease
) surgically whenever the typical manifestations of the overt disease appear; waiting often represents nothing more than a postponement of the surgical treatment until an emergency arises.
...
PMID:[Treatment of septic complications in diverticular disease of the colon]. 277 Nov 15
There is little uniformity in either the indications for operation, the classification of the pathology or the operative management of generalized or faecal peritonitis secondary to perforated
diverticular disease
. Nevertheless, this review has shown a clear advantage both in terms of immediate mortality and morbidity for primary resection over conservative operations in which the colon is retained in the abdomen. We propose that, when a clinical diagnosis of localized sepsis secondary to
diverticular disease
is made, the management should be nonoperative with systemic antibiotics and supportive therapy. Operation should be
reserved
for those patients with obvious generalized peritonitis or failure of conservative treatment. When operation is necessary the affected sigmoid loop should be resected and the operation completed as a Hartmann's procedure in all but the most favourable circumstances when a primary anastomosis may be considered after on-table irrigation of the colon.
...
PMID:Emergency surgery for diverticular disease complicated by generalized and faecal peritonitis: a review. 638 23
To evaluate what has been the most effective surgical treatment for massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding, we reviewed the records of 31 patients who underwent colon resection for hemodynamic instability and/or the need for continued transfusions. These 31 patients underwent either segmental colectomy (21 patients) or subtotal colectomy (10 patients). Resections were performed for
diverticular disease
(19 patients), angiodysplasia (eight patients), acute ulceration (three patients), and polyps (one patient). The re-bleeding rate (mean follow-up 1 year) for subtotal colectomy was 0 per cent, segmental resection with positive angiography was 14 per cent, and segmental resection with negative angiography was 42 per cent. The complication rate including myocardial infarction, ARDS, pneumonia, and renal failure was highest (83 per cent) in those patients receiving segmental resection with a negative angiogram. The mortality rate was also highest for segmental resection patients with negative angiography (57 per cent). The results of this review suggest that segmental resection should be performed when the bleeding site is identified angiographically. Subtotal colectomy should be
reserved
for massive bleeding with negative angiography.
...
PMID:The management of massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding. 821 70
A clinical syndrome of chronic colitis unique to the sigmoid colon harboring diverticular was recently reported; its histopathological appearance has not been fully elucidated. In this study, the authors analyzed the clinical and pathological features of 23 patients (age range, 38-87 years; median age, 72 years) with
diverticular disease
-associated chronic colitis. Nineteen presented with hematochezia; four had abdominal pain. Colonoscopic visualization of the mucosa showed patchy or confluent granularity and friability affecting the sigmoid colon encompassing diverticular ostia. Colonic mucosae proximal and distal to the sigmoid were endoscopically normal. Mucosal biopsy specimens showed features of idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease that included plasmacellular and eosinophilic expansion of the lamina propria (100%), neutrophilic cryptitis (100%) with crypt abscesses (61%), basal lymphoid aggregates (100%), distorted crypt architecture (87%), basal plasmacytosis (61%), surface epithelial sloughing (61%), focal Paneth cell metaplasia (48%), and granulomatous cryptitis (26%). Concomitant rectal biopsies obtained in five patients demonstrated histologically normal mucosa. Fourteen patients treated with high-fiber diet or antibiotics or both improved clinically, as did nine patients administered sulfasalazine or 5-aminosalicylic acid. Five patients underwent sigmoid colonic resection, three for stricture with obstruction and two for chronic blood loss anemia. Among a control population of 23 age- and gender-matched patients with
diverticular disease
without luminal surface mucosal abnormality, none required resection during the same follow-up period. By Fisher's exact test, a statistically significant difference in outcome for patients with and without colitis was detected (p = 0.049). In addition, three patients developed ulcerative proctosigmoiditis 6, 9, and 17 months after the onset of
diverticular disease
-associted colitis. The data indicate that
diverticular disease
-associated chronic sigmoid colitis expresses morphological features traditionally
reserved
for idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease. Its clinical and endoscopic profiles permit distinction from Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Patients with chronic colitis in conjunction with diverticula are at increased risk for sigmoid colonic resection.
Diverticular disease
-associated chronic colitis may also precede the onset of conventional ulcerative proctosigmoiditis in some cases.
...
PMID:Diverticular disease-associated chronic colitis. 854 Jun 14
Acute sigmoid diverticulitis may present in different forms. Firstly, symptomatic
diverticulosis
and acute diverticulitis have to be differentiated to allow for the proper selection of treatment. In the initial phase of diagnostic procedures in addition to clinical features a few laboratory data, plain X-ray films of the abdomen and abdominal ultrasound are helpful to obtain information about the potential presence of perforation, abscess, tumor masses and the structure of the colonic wall. Computed tomography is capable to answer most of the questions in the diagnostic work-up of acute diverticulitis. On the other hand, contrast barium enema provides little additional information and should be considered as contraindicated in acute diverticulitis. If at all, water-soluble contrast media should be employed. Endoscopy has its place in the differential diagnostic evaluation of severe bleeding and suspected tumor, but should be
reserved
for these limited indications.
...
PMID:[Acute sigmoid diverticulitis--current diagnosis]. 858 60
Colonic
diverticular disease
is a benign condition typical of the Western world, but it is not rare for even the 1st episode of diverticulitis to carry potentially fatal complications. The evolution of a peridiverticular process generally poses problems for medical treatment and exposes patients to repeated episodes of diverticulitis, making surgical treatment necessary in approximately 30% of symptomatic patients. One of the most worrying complications of
diverticulosis
is internal fistula. The most common types of fistula are colovesical and colovaginal, against which the uterus can act as an important protective factor. The symptoms and the clinical and instrumental management of patients with diverticular fistulas are much the same as for patients with episodes of acute diverticulitis. Staging of the disease (according to Hinchey) should be done promptly so that the necessary action can be taken prior to surgery, implementing total parenteral nutrition (TPN), nasogastric aspiration and broad-spectrum antibiotic treatment. The best surgical approach to adopt in patients with diverticulitis complicated by fistula is still not entirely clear, though the 3-step strategy is currently tending to be abandoned due to its high morbidity and mortality rates. There is a widespread conviction, however, that the 2-step strategy (Hartmann, or resection with protective stomy) and the 1-step alternative should be
reserved
, respectively, for patients in Hinchey stages 3, 4 and 1, 2 with a situation of attenuated local inflammation. The 1-step approach seems to be safe and effective. This report describes a case of colovaginal fistula in a patient with colonic diverticulosis who had recently undergone hysterectomy, but who, unlike such cases in the past, was treated in a single step using a laparoscopic technique.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic treatment of post-hysterectomy colovaginal fistula in diverticular disease. Case report. 1525 98
The authors report two cases of bezoars. The first was a large gastric bezoar in a patient who had undergone Billroth II gastroresection 40 years earlier. The second was a bezoar located in the distal part of the sigmoid colon accompanied by acute
diverticular disease
. Both bezoars were removed using endoscopic techniques. The method of exeresis is described together with the characteristics of the different anatomic sites. The authors review the literature focusing on nosology, symptomatology, diagnosis and guidelines for therapy. Considerable attention is paid to the use of endoscopy associated with prokinetic-enzymatic medical therapy. Surgery is
reserved
for rare cases of endoscopic failure, mostly recorded in the event of trichobezoars following the onset of intestinal occlusions caused by migration, or lastly when the cause of the bezoar is a pre-existing organic or functional stenosis.
...
PMID:Endoscopic treatment of bezoars. A critical review of the literature and presentation of two cases. 1649 24
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