| Literature DB >> 21849090 |
Michele Cerroni1, Roberto Cirocchi, Umberto Morelli, Stefano Trastulli, Jacopo Desiderio, Mario Mezzacapo, Chiara Listorti, Luigi Esperti, Diego Milani, Nicola Avenia, Nino Gullà, Giuseppe Noya, Carlo Boselli.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In patients who undergo low anterior rectal resection, the fashioning of a covering stoma (CS) is still controversial. In fact, a covering stoma (ileostomy or colostomy) is worsened by major complications related to the procedure, longer recovery time, necessity of a re-intervention under general anesthesia for stoma closure and poorer quality of life. The advantage of Ghost Ileostomy (GI) is that an ileostomy can be performed only when there is clinical evidence of anastomotic leakage, without performing further interventions with related complications when anastomotic leak is absent and therefore the procedure is not necessary. Moreover, in case of anastomotic dehiscence and necessity of delayed stoma opening, mortality and morbidity in patients with GI are comparable with the ones that occur in patients which had a classic covering stoma. On the other hand, is simple to think about the possible economic saving: avoiding an admission for performing the closure of the ileostomy, with all the costs connected (OR, hospitalization, post-operative period, treatment of possible complications) represents a huge saving for the hospital management and also raise the quality of life of the patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21849090 PMCID: PMC3170210 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-9-92
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Ghost ileostomy without parietal split. The second-to-last ileal loop is intraoperatively marked with a Prolene® stitch and the thread was then exteriorized with a Reverdin needle through the abdominal wall in the right iliac fossa.
Figure 2Ghost ileostomy with parietal split. A Mc Burney incision is made in the right iliac fossa.
Figure 3Ghost ileostomy with parietal split. The surgical incision is sutured in layers around the pediatric Robinson catheter.
Figure 4Ghost ileostomy with parietal split. The pediatric Robinson catheter is fixed to cutaneous surface.
Figure 5In case of anastomotic leakage the intestinal loop is exteriorized through the abdominal laparotomy in right iliac fossa.