Literature DB >> 14571753

Does stapled functional end-to-end anastomosis affect recurrence of Crohn's disease after ileocolonic resection?

Roberto Tersigni1, Luciano Alessandroni, Marco Barreca, Paolo Piovanello, Cosimo Prantera.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIMS: Crohn's disease is characterized by a high incidence of perianastomotic recurrence after ileocolonic resection. The influence of anastomotic configuration on the incidence of reoperation was evaluated in patients undergoing resection for Crohn's disease.
METHODOLOGY: 106 patients affected by ileocolonic Crohn's disease were divided in two groups: group I with a hand-sewn end-to-side or side-to-side isoperistaltic anastomosis (30 patients) and group II with functional end-to-end anastomosis made with linear staplers (76 patients).
RESULTS: The morbidity was 4.7%: 3 complications and a postoperative death occurred in group I and two complications occurred in group II. There were 5 recurrences (16.7%) in the hand-sewn group and 2 recurrences (2.6%) in the stapled group, with a recurrence rate of 3.54 and 0.92, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Our non-randomized study suggests a better trend toward the functional stapled technique, in terms of recurrence rate. These observations need further investigation with randomized controlled trials, to compare the two different anastomotic procedures.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 14571753

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepatogastroenterology        ISSN: 0172-6390


  17 in total

1.  Complications after end-to-end vs. side-to-side anastomosis in ileocecal Crohn's disease--early postoperative results from a randomized controlled multi-center trial (ISRCTN-45665492).

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3.  European evidence based consensus on the diagnosis and management of Crohn's disease: current management.

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Review 7.  Is "functional end-to-end anastomosis" really functional? A review of the literature on stapled anastomosis using linear staplers.

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Review 9.  Prevention of post-operative recurrence of Crohn's disease.

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10.  The surgical options and management of intestinal Crohn's disease.

Authors:  Raaj Chandra; James W E Moore
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