| Literature DB >> 8964153 |
A H Hölscher1, C Klingele, E Bollschweiler, W Schröder, K T Beckurts, J R Siewert.
Abstract
Within a 10-year period, 50 patients with postoperative ulcer recurrence after gastric resection were treated; 31 of these had one, 8 two, 5 three and 6 four previous gastric operations. Ulcer recurrence was attributed to surgery-related causes in 78% of the cases; excessively large gastric remnant 56%, anastomotic stenosis 18%, loop problems 4%. Some 22% of the patients had causes independent of previous surgery: abuse of non-steroidal antirheumatics (NSAR) 10%, hyperacidity of normal gastric remnant 6%, Zollinger-Ellison-Syndrome 6%. The most important co-factor of ulcer genesis was chronic abuse of NSAR (38% of the total series). The interval between onset of complaints of ulcer disease and the last ulcer-dependent operation amounted on average to 13.8 (0.5-36) years. The definitive treatment of recurrent ulceration was surgery in 34 cases-indicated by ulcer complications (73.5%) or failure of medical therapy (26.5%)-and conservative treatment in 16 cases. Surgery comprised 21 re-resections, 7 thoracic truncal vagotomies 4 total gastrectomies 1 Whipple procedure and 1 enucleation of gastrinoma (hospital mortality 0%). During the follow-up period (median 7.1 years, follow-up rate 96%), the cumulative ulcer re-recurrence rate was 57% for the conservatively treated group and 17.6% for the patients treated by surgery (p < 0.05). In none of the eight patients who died during long-term follow-up was the cause of death ulcer-related.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1996 PMID: 8964153 DOI: 10.1007/pl00002523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chirurg ISSN: 0009-4722 Impact factor: 0.955