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1.
PURPOSE: Although ulcerative colitis commonly affects young females, the impact of ulcerative colitis and its treatment on female fertility have not been well studied. The purpose of this survey was to examine the impact of ulcerative colitis and ileal pouch-anal anastomosis on female reproductive ability.METHODS: Demographic, reproductive history, and disease history information were obtained via a questionnaire mailed to females who had pelvic pouch surgery or nonoperative management for ulcerative colitis. Based on age at diagnosis, age at surgery, and marital status, 153 females who had pelvic pouch surgery and 60 females who had nonoperative management for ulcerative colitis were identified for inclusion. Patients were asked if they attempted to become pregnant, when relative to their diagnosis or surgery, and if they were successful. Married or cohabiting females aged 18 to 44 years who failed to become pregnant during 12 months of unprotected intercourse were defined as infertile.RESULTS: The infertility rate was significantly higher in females who had pelvic pouch surgery compared with females managed nonoperatively (59/153 (38.1 percent) vs. 8/60 (13.3 percent), respectively; P < 0.001). There was no difference in female fertility after diagnosis with ulcerative colitis compared with before diagnosis (odds ratio, 0.68; P = 0.23). In contrast, there was a 98 percent reduction in fertility after pelvic pouch surgery compared with before surgery (odds ratio, 0.021; P < 0.0001). By logistic regression, increasing age was the only factor associated with failure to become pregnant after surgery (odds ratio, 1.136 per additional year of age; P = 0.027).CONCLUSIONS: Females with ulcerative colitis who are managed nonoperatively have normal fertility, which suggests that ulcerative colitis and medical therapy do not decrease female reproductive ability. After pelvic pouch surgery for ulcerative colitis, female fertility is significantly decreased and this problem should be discussed routinely with patients considering this procedure.Read at the meeting of The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, New Orleans, Louisiana, June 21 to 26, 2003.Supported by a grant from the Maternal Research Unit, Sunnybrook and Womens College Health Sciences Centre. Dr. Johnson was supported by the Lew Dunn Scholarship. Dr. Richard was supported by a fellowship from the Crohns and Colitis Foundation of Canada.  相似文献   

2.
PURPOSE: This study was designed to evaluate the pregnancies, method of delivery, and functional results of females with chronic ulcerative colitis who have an ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. METHODS: A mailed questionnaire was sent to all females with an ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for chronic ulcerative colitis. Information on the pregnancy, method of delivery, and outcome was collected. Those females who had a successful pregnancy and delivery were contacted by telephone to clarify results and determine pouch functional results. Other clinical information was obtained from the Mount Sinai Hospital Inflammatory Bowel Disease database. RESULTS: Thirty-eight subjects had 67 pregnancies. Of these, 29 subjects had 49 deliveries. There were 25 vaginal deliveries and 24 cesarean sections. There were two pouch-related complications during the pregnancies and four pouch-related complications postpartum. All were treated nonoperatively. Stool frequency and day and night incontinence were increased during pregnancy in most subjects, but after delivery, prepregnancy function was restored in 24 (83 percent) of them. Five subjects (17 percent) had some degree of permanent deterioration in pouch function. Of these, three had vaginal deliveries, and two had cesarean sections. Multiple births and birth weight were not found to adversely affect subsequent pouch function. CONCLUSION: Pregnancy is safe in females with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Functional results are altered almost exclusively during the third trimester, but pouch function promptly returns to prepregnancy status in most females. A small proportion of females have long-term disturbances in function, but these are not related to the method of delivery. Thus, the method of delivery should be dictated by obstetric considerations.  相似文献   

3.
Purpose This study was designed to compare short-term outcomes after laparoscopic ileal pouch-anal anastomosis with those of open ileal pouch-anal anastomosis in patients with both sclerosing cholangitis and ulcerative colitis. Methods Sixteen patients with sclerosing cholangitis and ulcerative colitis undergoing laparoscopic ileal pouch-anal anastomosis were matched with 16 open ileal pouch control subjects by sex, American Society of Anesthesiologists’ score, age, and body mass index. Results Operative mortality was zero. Operative time was longer in the laparoscopic group (500 ± 125.8 vs. 381.8 ± 60.9 minutes, P = 0.03). Thirty-day complications were not significantly different between groups (laparoscopic 25 percent vs. open 43.7 percent, P = 0.26). Length of stay was significantly shorter in the laparoscopic group (5.3 ± 1.3 days vs. 9.9 ± 3.3 days open, P < 0.001). Average return of gastrointestinal function was 2.5 days in the laparoscopic group and 4.8 days in the open group (P = 0.001). Time to soft diet was three days in the laparoscopic group and six days in the open group (P < 0.001). All patients were alive and all pouches were intact at last follow-up. Conclusions Laparoscopic ileal pouch-anal anastomosis is feasible with apparent safety in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis, resulting in shorter duration of hospital stay and quicker return of gastrointestinal function compared with the open procedure with no difference in perioperative complications, reoperations, and readmissions.  相似文献   

4.
PURPOSE The aim of this study was to determine if ileal pouch-anal anastomosis in patients with ulcerative colitis is a psychologic burden for patients, the frequency of mental disorders, the amount of psychologic distress, and their possible disease-related determinants. These factors were studied in patients with ulcerative colitis after ileal pouch anal anastomosis and were compared with ulcerative colitis patients without ileal pouch-anal anastomosis and the general German population.METHODS A total of 37 patients with ulcerative colitis after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (age 46.8 ± 11.8 years; 35 percent female) and 62 patients with ulcerative colitis without ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (age 44.4 ± 13.9 years; 37 percent female) completed the following questionnaires: medical and sociodemographic questionnaire of the German Competence Network Inflammatory Bowel Diseases and the German version of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Disease activity was measured in patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis by the Pouch Disease Activity Index and in patients without ileal pouch-anal anastomosis by the German Inflammatory Bowel Disease Activity Index. Psychologic distress was assessed by the subscale scores of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. A probable mental disorder was identified if a patient scored 11 or higher in at least one subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.RESULTS The frequency of a probable psychiatric disorder in patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (16 percent) and without ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (23 percent) did not differ from that in the general German population (17 percent). Ulcerative colitis patients with or without ileal pouch-anal anastomosis did not differ in the amount of psychologic distress. Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis patients had higher levels of anxiety than the general population (P < 0.01). Regression models of disease-related factors predicting mental disorder and psychologic distress showed no significant results.CONCLUSIONS Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis neither increases nor decreases the frequency of mental disorders or the amount of psychologic distress in ulcerative colitis patients.This investigation is part of the Competence Network IBD, sponsored by the German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF D 20.00415).Presented in part at the 25th European Conference on Psychosomatic Research, June 23 to 26, 2004, Berlin, Germany.  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: Salvage procedures for failed ileal pouch-anal anastomoses frequently require total reconstruction with a combined abdominal and perineal approach. The aim of this study was to determine the indications for surgery and the outcomes in this group of patients. METHODS: All patients who underwent combined abdominal and perineal ileal pouch-anal anastomosis reconstruction at the Mount Sinai Hospital between 1982 and 2000 were reviewed. Data were collected prospectively in the inflammatory bowel disease database. RESULTS: Sixty-three reconstructive procedures were performed in 57 patients, with a mean age of 33.9 (±10.4) years at the time of reconstruction. There were 14 males. The mean follow-up was 69.1 months. The initial indication for ileal pouch-anal anastomosis was ulcerative colitis in 98 percent. The primary indication for reconstruction was pouch-vaginal fistula in 21 patients, long outlet in 14, pelvic sepsis in 14, ileoanal anastomotic stricture in 5, pouch-perineal fistula in 2, and chronic pouchitis in 1. The mean operative time was four hours (±1.1), the average blood loss was 500 mL (±400), and the average length of stay was 10.3 days (±4.6). All patients had a diverting ileostomy. Forty-two (73.6 percent) of the patients have a functioning pouch. Seven (12.3 percent) patients have had their pouch excised. The ileostomy has not yet been closed in 8 (14 percent) patients; 3 of these patients are awaiting closure, whereas the remaining 5 have a permanently defunctioning ileostomy. Eighty-nine percent have ten or fewer bowel movements per day. No patients are incontinent of stool during the day, whereas two patients are incontinent at night. Seventeen percent complain of frequent urgency. Despite this, more than 80 percent rate their physical and psychological health as good to excellent. CONCLUSION: Reconstructive pouch surgery has a high success rate in experienced hands. The functional results in those whose pouch is in use are good.  相似文献   

6.
INTRODUCTION Frequent loose stools test the integrity of sphincter function in patients undergoing ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. The authors hypothesized that women with anal sphincter defects were more likely to experience incontinence episodes than women with intact sphincter muscles following ileal pouch-anal anastomosis.METHODS From 1996 to 1998, 42 women with a mean age of 42 (range, 22–63) years were prospectively evaluated by anorectal manometry and endoanal ultrasound before pouch surgery. Forty women underwent a stapled ileal pouch-anal anastomosis and two underwent a handsewn anastomosis. All patients considered themselves continent of stool before the procedure. A postoperative survey including the Cleveland Clinic Florida scale, Fecal Incontinence Severity Index, and Fecal Incontinence Quality of Life scale was sent to study participants.RESULTS Nineteen women with an obstetrical history had significant sphincter defects associated with significant lower mean resting pressure, mean squeeze pressure, and shorter anal canal length (3 vs. 3.7 cm, P = 0.0007). Thirty-five women (83 percent) responded resulting in a mean follow-up of 62 (range, 49-72) months. Fourteen responders (mean age, 46 years) had sphincter defects but no significant difference was found in Cleveland Clinic Florida scale, Fecal Incontinence Severity Index, or Fecal Incontinence Quality of Life scale scores when compared with those without defects.CONCLUSION Although almost all women reported episodes of seepage, marked sphincter defects associated with low anal pressures and shorter anal canal length did not affect anal function following pouch surgery. This study supports the findings that continent women with significant sphincter defects on ultrasound evaluation may be considered for restorative proctocolectomy.Poster presentation at the meeting of The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, New Orleans, Louisiana, June 22 to 26, 2003.  相似文献   

7.
PURPOSE: Pouchitis has been associated with abnormal bacterial flora responding to antibiotics. Dietary factors may play a role in modifying the qualitative and quantitative components of the microflora. We evaluated interactions between nutritional factors, fecal and mucosal bacterial flora, and mucosal morphology in patients with a history of pouchitis compared with patients with optimal outcome at least five years after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for ulcerative colitis. METHODS: Thirty-two patients were enrolled in the study: 11 (7 males; mean age, 49.8 years) with optimal outcome and 21 (11 males; mean age, 47.3 years) with pouchitis history. A seven-day food diary was recorded, endoscopy performed, and biopsies taken from the pouch for histology, mucin staining, and bacterial culture. Fresh fecal samples were quantitatively cultured, and fecal bile acids analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography. RESULTS: No differences existed in mean nutrient intake, composition of fecal bile acids, or microbial tissue biopsy cultures between the groups with and without pouchitis. Those with optimal outcome tended to have more benign disease course of ulcerative colitis than patients with pouchitis. In those patients, fecal concentrations (log10 colony-forming unit/g) of anaerobes and aerobes were significantly higher (P = 0.007). Degree of villous atrophy and colonic metaplasia were both associated with fecal anaerobic flora. Low intake of lactose was associated with sulfomucin predominance. A negative correlation existed between fecal aerobes and dietary lactose consumption. CONCLUSIONS: A higher total load of fecal anaerobic bacterial flora is strongly associated with degree of colonic metaplasia, villous atrophy, and inflammation activity after surgery for ulcerative colitis. An association existed between dietary lactose, fecal bacteria, and pouch morphology. Lactose may have prebiotic properties.  相似文献   

8.
A case of adenocarcinoma, developed in the anal canal after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for ulcerative colitis using a double stapling technique, is reported. In this case a T3N0 cecal cancer was found unexpectedly in the colectomy specimen. Two years later, this patient presented with an outlet obstruction of the pouch because of development of an adenocarcinoma of the anal canal. This was treated with an abdominoperineal excision of the pouch and anorectum.  相似文献   

9.
Purpose The primary end point of this study was to determine the risk factors that predict chronic pouchitis in those patients having ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Methods A total of 237 patients with ulcerative colitis and undergoing ileal pouch-anal anastomosis by one surgeon at Oregon Health & Science University from 1993 to 2003 were evaluated. Data were gathered via retrospective chart reviews and by a questionnaire administered by telephone in 2004. Patients were excluded if there was less than one-year follow-up documented in the chart or they could not be contacted by telephone (n = 62), postoperative diagnosis of Crohn’s disease (n = 3), failed ileoanal procedure (n = 1), and one-stage ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (n = 3), leaving 167 patients for evaluation. Patients were defined as having chronic pouchitis (>3 episodes of pouchitis) or no pouchitis (≤ 3 episodes of pouchitis). Potential risk factors included number of operations used to perform ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, fulminant ulcerative colitis with two-stage operation, duration of diverting ileostomy after pouch formation, primary sclerosing cholangitis, other extraintestinal manifestations of ulcerative colitis, preoperative liver function tests, duration of ulcerative colitis, and the occurrence of postoperative complications. Initial univariate analysis was performed on all risk factors. Multivariate analysis was performed on all univariate risk factors with P values < 0.2. Results The prevalence of chronic pouchitis in our population was 46 percent. The following variables were identified during univariate analysis and entered into a multivariate model: preoperative serum albumin (P = 0.07), PSC (P = 0.126), duration of diverting ileostomy (P = 0.111), fulminant ulcerative colitis with two-stage operation, (P = 0.051), the presence of postoperative complications (P = 0.031), and the type of postoperative complications (anastomotic complications, P = 0.013). Patients who did not undergo diverting ileostomy at the time of their ileal pouch-anal anastomosis trended toward a lower likelihood of developing chronic pouchitis (P = 0.06). Multivariate analysis showed that patients with postoperative complications (53 percent, P = 0.042), specifically anastomotic complications, were more likely to develop chronic pouchitis (P = 0.005). Eight percent of patients had primary sclerosing cholangitis and 11 percent of patients had at least one extraintestinal manifestation of ulcerative colitis. Patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis were not more likely to develop chronic pouchitis (P = 0.168). Patients with extraintestinal manifestations also were not more likely to develop chronic pouchitis (P = 0.273). Conclusions Chronic pouchitis is a frequent complication after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. In this study patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis or other extraintestinal manifestations of ulcerative colitis were not more likely to develop chronic pouchitis. Patients with postoperative complications, specifically anastomotic complications after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, were more likely to develop chronic pouchitis and may benefit from early strategies to prevent pouchitis. Poster presentation at the meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology, Honolulu, Hawaii, October 28 to November 2, 2005.  相似文献   

10.
PURPOSE Although acute pouchitis after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis is common and easily treated, continuous pouch inflammation seen clinically as chronic, antibiotic-dependent pouchitis, and/or Crohn’s disease remains a difficult management problem. Compared with ulcerative colitis, indeterminate colitis patients undergoing ileal pouch-anal anastomosis have a higher incidence of continuous pouch inflammation, which may represent persistent immune reactivity to microbial antigens. Antibody responses to three microbial antigens (oligomannan anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae, outer membrane porin C of Escherichia coli, and an antigen (I2) from Pseudomonas flourescens) are more commonly seen in Crohn’s disease, whereas antibodies to a cross-reactive antigen (perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies) is more suggestive of ulcerative colitis. We examined whether preoperative serologic responses to these antigens were associated with Crohn’s disease in indeterminate colitis patients after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis.METHODS Twenty-eight indeterminate colitis patients undergoing ileal pouch-anal anastomosis were prospectively assessed for the development of pouchitis or Crohn’s disease. Serologic responses were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and immunofluorescence. Patients were classified based on four predominant profiles of antibody expression. Antibody profiles were determined before knowledge of clinical outcome.RESULTS Median follow-up was 38 (range, 3–75) months. Of 16 patients (61 percent) who developed pouch inflammation, 4 (25 percent) had acute pouchitis and 12 (75 percent) had continuous pouch inflammation (9 had chronic pouchitis, 3 had Crohn’s disease). No preoperative clinical factor predicted the development of these pouch complications. Overall, 16 patients (57 percent) had a positive antibody reactivity profile. Serologic expression of any marker alone did not predict the development of continuous pouch inflammation. However, continuous pouch inflammation developed in 10 of 16 patients (63 percent) who had a positive antibody reactivity profile compared with only 2 of 12 patients (17 percent) who had a negative antibody reactivity profile (P = 0.015).CONCLUSIONS Indeterminate colitis patients who have a positive antibody reactivity profile before ileal pouch-anal anastomosis have a significantly higher incidence of continuous pouch inflammation after surgery than those with a negative profile.Reprints are not available.Supported by USPHS Grant PO 1 DK46763 and the Feintech Family Foundation.  相似文献   

11.
Purpose Polypoid lesions rarely occur in the ileal pouch in ulcerative colitis patients after restorative proctocolectomy. Clinical features, malignant potential, and management of pouch polyps have not been characterized. Methods We identified 23 ulcerative colitis patients with large polyps (size≥1 cm) of the ileal pouch from our 2,512-case ulcerative colitis pouch database. Demographic, clinical, endoscopic, and histologic data were reviewed. The Pouchitis Disease Activity Index symptom score (range, 0–6) was used to quantify patients’ symptoms before and after polypectomy. Results Of the 23 patients, 95.7 percent (22 patients) had pouch endoscopy indicated for the evaluation of symptoms when polyps were detected, and 60.9 percent of patients had the polyps in the pouch, 26.1 percent in the anal transitional zone, and 21.7 percent in the afferent limb. The mean size of pouch polyps was 1.9 cm ± 1 cm. Twenty-one patients (91.3 percent) had concomitant pouchitis, cuffitis, or Crohn’s disease. On histology, 21 patients (91.3 percent) had inflammatory-type polyps, and 2 (8.7 percent) had dysplastic or malignant polyps. In 18 patients who had endoscopic polypectomy with concurrent medical therapy, the prepolypectomy and postpolypectomy mean symptom scores were 3.4 ± 1.7 and 1.1 ± 1.2 points, respectively (P = 0.015). Two patients (8.7 percent) had pouch excision for malignancy or for concomitant chronic refractory pouchitis. Conclusions The majority of patients with large ileal pouch polyps were symptomatic. These polyps were typically detected on the background of pouchitis, cuffitis, or Crohn’s disease. Although the majority of polyps were inflammatory type, polyps in two patients were dysplastic or malignant. Endoscopic polypectomy with concomitant medical therapy seemed to improve patients’ symptom scores. Supported in part by a NIH grant R03 DK 067275 and an American College of Gastroenterology Clinical Research Award (to B.S.). Poster presentation at meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology, Honolulu, Hawaii, October 30 to November 2, 2005. Reprints are not available.  相似文献   

12.
A regional patient group comprising 783 patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) and 185 patients with Crohn's disease (CD) diagnosed during the period 1960 to 1978 was analysed in accordance with clinical appearance at diagnosis. Of the UC patients, 16% showed total colonic involvement, 41% substantial colonic involvement, and 41% rectal affection only. The disease extent was positively correlated to the degree of activity but not to the age or sex of the patients. 70% of the patients were in moderately or very active stage of disease, 28% in slightly active stage, and 2% inactive at the time of diagnosis. 43% of the patients had experienced weight loss, 27% fever, and 53% abdominal pains in their initial attack of the disease. Immunological manifestations were present in 13%. Of the CD patients 31% had small-bowel localization only, 28% large bowel only, 36% ileocolonic affection, and 5% other combinations. Patients with ileal involvement were significantly younger than patients with colonic involvement. There was no sex difference in accordance with the localization of Crohn's disease. 71% of the patients were in moderately or very active stage of disease and 29% in low activity at diagnosis. The intestinal symptoms were independent of the sex and age of the patients, whereas abdominal pains were present significantly more frequently in younger age groups. In all, 76% of the patients experienced abdominal pains, 34% fever, and 54% weight loss. Immunological symptoms from joints, skin, or eyes were present in 12% of the patients.  相似文献   

13.
PURPOSE: This study was designed to evaluate pregnancy, delivery, and functional outcome in females before and after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for chronic ulcerative colitis.METHODS: From a prospective database of 1,454 patients who underwent ileal pouch-anal anastomosis for chronic ulcerative colitis between 1981 and 1995, a standardized questionnaire was sent to all female patients aged 40 years or younger at the time of ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (n = 544).RESULTS: The response rate was 83 percent (450/544) with a mean follow-up after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis of 13 years. A total of 141 females were pregnant after the chronic ulcerative colitis diagnosis, but before ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (236 pregnancies; mean, 1.7) and 87 percent delivered vaginally. A mean of five (range, 1–16) years after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, 135 females were pregnant (232 pregnancies; mean, 1.7). Comparison of pregnancy and delivery before and after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis in the same females (n = 37) showed no difference in birth weight, duration of labor, pregnancy/delivery complications, vaginal delivery rates (59 percent before vs. 54 percent after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis), and unplanned cesarean section (19 vs.14 percent). Planned cesareans occurred only after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis and were prompted by obstetrical concerns in only one of eight. Pouch function at first follow-up after delivery (mean, 7 months) was similar to pregravida function. After ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, daytime stool frequency was the same after delivery as pregravida (5.4 vs. 5.4, not significant) but was increased at the time of last follow-up (68 months after delivery; 5.4 vs. 6.4; P < 0.001). The rate of occasional fecal incontinence also was higher (20 percent after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis and 21 percent pregravida vs. 36 percent at last follow-up; P = 0.01). No difference in functional outcome was noted compared with females who were never pregnant after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (n = 307). Age and becoming pregnant did not affect the probability of pouch-related complications, such as stricture, pouchitis, and obstruction.CONCLUSIONS: Successful pregnancy and vaginal delivery occur routinely in females with chronic ulcerative colitis before and after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. The method of delivery should be dictated by obstetrical considerations. Pouch function and the incidence of complications in females with pregnancies seem largely unaffected long-term.Read at the meeting of The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, New Orleans, Louisiana, June 23 to 27, 2003.  相似文献   

14.
Salemans JMJI, Nagengast FM, Tangerman A, van Schaik A, de Haan AFJ, Jansen JBMJ. Postprandial conjugated and unconjugated serum bile acid levels after proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Scand J Gastroenterol 1993;28:786-790.

In patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) bile acid reabsorption may be impaired, and stasis may lead to deconjugation and dehydroxylation of bile acids as a result of bacterial overgrowth. We therefore studied fasting and postprandial conjugated and unconjugated serum levels of cholic (CA), chenodeoxycholic (CDCA), and deoxycholic acid (DCA) in 11 patients who underwent proctocolectomy with IPAA and in 11 healthy controls. Fasting levels of conjugated DCA but not CA and CDCA were significantly lower in IPAA patients. Postprandially, conjugated bile acid levels were significantly lower in IPAA patients. Postprandial unconjugated CA levels were significantly higher and CDCA levels tended to be higher in IPAA patients, whereas unconjugated DCA levels were lower in IPAA patients. These data suggest that reabsorption of conjugated bile acids is impaired after IPAA; deconjugation of bile acids may result from bacterial overgrowth secondary to stasis in the pouch; and dehydroxylation of bile acids is decreased after proctocolectomy with IPAA.  相似文献   

15.
Purpose This study describes an institutional experience with sacral osteomyelitis after proctocolectomy and ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Methods A total of 2,375 patients underwent ileal pouch-anal anastomosis at the Mayo Clinic between January 1981 and January 2002. In addition, we have served as a tertiary referral base for patients with complications after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis performed at other institutions. Review of our ileal pouch-anal anastomosis prospective database and directed search of the central pathology, microbiology, radiology, and surgical records at the Mayo Clinic was performed using these keywords: osteomyelitis, ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, inflammatory bowel disease, chronic ulcerative colitis, and Crohn's disease. Results Two of 2,375 patients (0.08 percent) with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis performed at our institution have had sacral osteomyelitis. In addition, two patients have been referred for continuing care after construction of an ileal pouch-anal anastomosis and diagnosis of sacral osteomyelitis at another institution. Two of the four patients maintained normal pouch function after sacral debridement and a period of fecal stream diversion. One patient remains diverted with resolved sacral osteomyelitis after debridement. The last patient died from squamous-cell cancer involving the sacrum. Conclusions Sacral osteomyelitis is a rare and heretofore unreported complication of ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Conservative measures using antibiotics alone proved unsuccessful, and delaying definitive management may have contributed to the degeneration of a chronic sacral abscess into squamous-cell cancer. With more aggressive treatment comprising sacral debridement, long-term antibiotics, and fecal diversion, pouch function can potentially be preserved.  相似文献   

16.
INTRODUCTION The aim of this study was to assess the outcome of patients with indeterminate colitis undergoing double-stapled ileal pouch anal anastomosis.METHODS A retrospective review of demographic, disease-related, and outcome variables of all patients undergoing double-stapled ileal pouch anal anastomosis from August 1988 to January 2000 was undertaken. All patients were evaluated using the validated American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons Fecal Incontinence Severity Index. Patients with familial adenomatous polyposis, those who had undergone pouch revision or had S-configured pouches, and patients with a follow-up of less than three months were excluded from analysis.RESULTS Three hundred ninety-five patients underwent the double-stapled ileal pouch anal anastomosis; of these 303 patients were included for analysis. The mean duration of follow-up was 40 months. Fifty-six (18.1 percent) had a preoperative diagnosis of indeterminate colitis. Postoperatively, indeterminate colitis was diagnosed in 13 (4.3 percent), mucosal ulcerative colitis in 285 (94 percent), and Crohns disease in 5 (1.6 percent). The overall complication rate was 37.7 percent, 60 percent, and (30.7) percent in patients with mucosal ulcerative colitis, Crohns disease, and indeterminate colitis, respectively. Postoperative hemorrhage, abscess, and fistula occurred in 2.4 percent, 6.3 percent, and 3.9 percent, respectively, in patients with mucosal ulcerative colitis, and 0 percent, 15.3 percent, and 7.7 percent, respectively, in patients with indeterminate colitis. Small-bowel obstruction occurred in 8.5 percent, 20 percent, and 7.7 percent of patients with mucosal ulcerative colitis, Crohns disease, and indeterminate colitis, respectively. Pouchitis occurred in 4.6 percent of patients with mucosal ulcerative colitis but in none of the patients with indeterminate colitis. Dysplasia of the anal transition zone was seen in one patient each with mucosal ulcerative colitis and indeterminate colitis. These patients had consistent follow-up and neither showed any sign of evolution to neoplastic disease. None of the patients with indeterminate colitis had a postoperative diagnosis of Crohns disease during the follow-up period. Functional outcome was comparable in all three patient groups.CONCLUSION The outcome of the double-stapled ileal pouch anal anastomosis in patients with indeterminate colitis is similar to that of patients with mucosal ulcerative colitis. Therefore, it is a safe option in patients with indeterminate colitis.This work was funded in part by a research grant from the Eleanor Naylor Dana Charitable Trust Fund.Poster presentation at the meeting of The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, June 2 to 7, 2001, San Diego, California.Poster presentation at the meeting of the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland, June 25 to 27, 2001, Harrogate, United Kingdom.Presented at the meeting of the International Society of University Colon and Rectal Surgeons, April 14 to 17, 2002, Osaka, Japan. Partially supported by the Japanese Organizing Committee of ISUCRS Congress, Osaka, Japan.  相似文献   

17.
Objective. There has long been doubt about the need to exclude oats from a gluten-free diet (GFD). The objective of this study was to review the literature in order to arrive at a firm recommendation. Material and methods. Electronic databases were searched up to February 2006 using the terms “oats” and “coeliac disease”. Results. Twenty relevant studies were found and presented. Early studies were small and uncontrolled and mostly indirect. In 10 studies involving 165 patients, only 1 patient was shown to have histological damage as a result of consuming oats. Conclusions. Coeliac patients can, to some advantage, include oats in a GFD although there may be the occasional patient who is also oats sensitive. Previous conflicting results may have been partly due to contamination of oats by wheat. Lest contamination is present and exceeds the safe threshold, we recommend that coeliac patients should only add oats to their GFD when they are established on a conventional GFD, and stop eating oats if they develop any symptoms.  相似文献   

18.
PURPOSE This study was designed to evaluate the impact of childbirth on anal sphincter integrity and function, functional outcome, and quality of life in females with restorative proctocolectomy and ileal pouch-anal anastomosis.METHODS The patients who had at least one live birth after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis were asked to return for a comprehensive assessment. They were asked to complete the following questionnaires: the Short Form-36, Cleveland Global Quality of Life scale, American Society of Colorectal Surgeons fecal incontinence severity index, and time trade-off method. Additionally, anal sphincter integrity (endosonography) and manometric pressures were measured by a medical physician blinded to the delivery technique. Anal sphincter physiology also was evaluated with electromyography and pudendal nerve function by nerve terminal motor latency technique.RESULTS Of 110 eligible females who had at least one live birth after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, 57 participated in the study by returning for clinical evaluation to the clinic and 25 others by returning the quality of life and functional outcome questionnaires. Patients were classified into two groups: patients who had only cesarean section delivery after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (n = 62) and patients who had at least one vaginal delivery after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (n = 20). The mean follow-up from the date of the most recent delivery was 4.9 years. The vaginal delivery group had significantly higher incidence of an anterior sphincter defect by anal endosonography (50 percent) vs. cesarean section delivery group (13 percent; P = 0.012). The mean squeeze anal pressure was significantly higher in the patients who had only cesarean section delivery (150 mmHg) after restorative proctocolectomy than patients who had at least one vaginal delivery (120 mmHg) after restorative proctocolectomy (P = 0.049). Quality of life evaluated by time trade-off method also was significantly better in the cesarean section delivery group (1) vs. vaginal delivery group (0.9; P < 0.001).CONCLUSIONS The risk of the sphincter injury and quality of life measured by time trade-off method are significantly worse after vaginal delivery compared with cesarean section in patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. In the short-term, this does not seem to substantially influence pouch function or quality of life; however, the long-term effects remain unknown, thus obstetric concern may not be the only factor dictating the type of delivery in this group of patients. A planned cesarean section may eliminate these potential and factual concerns in ileal pouch-anal anastomosis patients.Podium presentation at the meeting of The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, Dallas, Texas, May 8 to 13, 2004.  相似文献   

19.
Purpose Anemia is frequently observed in patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. The identification of the underlying causes can be challenging. This study was designed to define the prevalence and to identify etiologic factors for anemia in this patient population. Methods A prospectively maintained database and medical records of patients who had restorative proctocolectomy between 1998 and 2005 were reviewed. All patients with laboratory evaluation at least six months after the surgery were studied. The last reported hemoglobin served as the index value. All patients with anemia (hemoglobin < 13.5 g/dl for males, <12 g/dl for females) were identified. A second group of randomly selected, ileal-pouch patients with normal hemoglobin served as control. Demographic and clinical variables were evaluated. Results A total of 389 patients (214 males) had documented hemoglobin values. Sixty-seven patients (17 percent; 40 males) had anemia. The prevalence of anemia was 19 and 15 percent in males and females, respectively. The prevalence was 17 percent among patients with underlying ulcerative colitis vs. 26 percent in patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (P  =  0.27). The mean hemoglobin in the anemia group was 11.4 (median, 11.7) g/dl. One patient (2 percent) had severe (<7 g/dl), 11 (16 percent) had moderate (7–9.9 g/dl), and 55 (82 percent) had mild (≥10 g/dl) anemia. One patient (2 percent) had macrocytic, 16 (24 percent) had microcytic, and 49 (74 percent) had normocytic anemia. Sixteen patients (24 percent) had unidentified causes for anemia. Multivariable analysis showed that the presence of malignancy or desmoid tumor and the J-pouch configuration were the only independent risk factors associated with anemia. Conclusions Anemia is common in ileal-pouch patients. Malignancy or desmoid tumor and J-pouch configuration are independent risk factors for anemia. One-fourth of the patients with anemia have unclear etiology. Poster presentation at Digestive Disease Week, Los Angeles, California, May 22 to 24, 2006. Supported by a Clinical Research Grant from the American College of Gastroenterology and an intramural grant from Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio (to IO) and by NIH R03 DK 067275 (to BS). Reprints are not available.  相似文献   

20.
Purpose This study was designed to determine whether changes in length of stay and 30-day readmission, reoperation, and excision rates for the ileal pouch-anal anastomosis occurred over time and with changes in surgical technique and hospital volume. Methods Using three population-based administrative databases, data on all ileal pouch-anal anastomoses performed in the province of Ontario between January 1992 and June 1998 were obtained. The effect of age, gender, stage of the procedure, year of surgery, and hospital volume were examined for their effect on length of stay and readmission, reoperation, and excision rates. Results There were 1,285 ileal pouch-anal anastomoses performed in 58 hospitals. There was a significant decrease in length of stay and reoperation and excision rates but a concommitant increase in readmission rate during the study period. Patients younger than aged 40 years had a significantly lower length of stay and excision rate. Patients who had a two-stage procedure had a shorter length of stay, readmission, and reoperative rate compared with those having a three-stage procedure. Hospital volume was a significant predictor of need for reoperation and excision with both low-volume and medium-volume hospitals having significantly higher rates than high-volume hospitals. Conclusions Outcome after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis has improved. It is significantly better in patients younger than aged 40 years, having a two-stage procedure, and where surgery is performed at high-volume hospitals. It is likely that both modifications in surgical technique and surgical experience have led to improvements in clinical outcome after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Dr. Kennedy was supported by fellowships from the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of Canada and the Medical Research Council of Canada. Presented at the Canadian Surgical Forum, Quebec City, September 6 to 9, 2001, and The Surgical Forum, The American College of Surgeons Clinical Congress, New Orleans, October 7 to 12, 2001. Reprints are not available.  相似文献   

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