1.Investigation of 165 cases of postoperative occlusion during 3 years (1995 - 1997) at B¾c Giang General Hospital
Journal of Preventive Medicine 2002;12(1):27-31
The study involved 165 patients who have postoperative occlusion, including 91 males, 69 females with age ranged from 5 months to 80 years. The results showed that intestinal occlusion is most likely to be seen after operation for appendicitis, gastro-duodenal perforation and abdominal injury. Surgery for occlusion is performed if conservative treatments (gastric aspiration, fluid infusion and antibiotics) were failure. There were 8 deaths in this series.
Intestinal Obstruction
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Appendicitis
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Surgery
2.Some remarks on the treatment of post operative intestinal obstruction at Thai Binh General Hospital in 2 years period of 1994-1995
Journal of Practical Medicine 2004;484(8):47-48
There were 144 cases of post operative intestinal obstruction at Thai Binh General Hospital from 1994 to 1995. 96 cases were divided in operative group; 48 cases in the group without operation. The rate of post operative intestinal obstruction attained 23.4% of all cases of mechanical obstruction, i.e at 2nd rank following the obstruction caused by round worm. Preserving intestinal therapy was 31.9% for post operative intestinal obstruction, mortality 2.7% (4/144 cases) i.e twofolds versus mechanical obstruction cases 1.3% (8/614 cases). The majority of early post operative intestinal obstruction needed an operation (9/11 cases). The incidence of intestinal necrosis complications of post operative intestinal obstruction accounted for 11.8% (11/144 cases). More than a half of causes was the adhesion of intestinal on the scar of previous operation on the wall of abdomen (58.3%).
Therapeutics
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Intestinal Obstruction
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Surgery
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Epidemiology
3.Laparoscopic surgery in the treatment of 12 patients with radiogenic small bowel damage.
Jian WANG ; You-Sheng LI ; Dan-Hua YAO ; Xiang-Duan WANG ; Jie-Shou LI
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2013;16(5):455-458
OBJECTIVETo summarize the preliminary experience of laparoscopic surgery in the treatment of radiogenic small bowel damage.
METHODSClinical data of 12 patients with radiogenic small bowel damage undergoing laparoscopic operation in our department from January 2012 to January 2013 were retrospectively reviewed.
RESULTSTwo patients were transferred to laparotomy because of dense adhesion in the entire abdomen and uncertainty of metastatic malignancy, respectively. The laparoscopic surgery was successfully performed in other 10 patients. Three patients received enterostomy or colostomy because of intestinal obstruction or bleeding. Among the other seven patients who underwent intestinal resection and anastomosis, intestinal anastomosis was performed with an small adjunvant incision in the former two cases and performed under laparoscopy in the latter five cases. The post-operative complication included one anastomotic fistula.
CONCLUSIONLaparoscopic surgery can be safely used in radiogenic small bowel damage patients, which can avoid the delayed incision healing.
Colostomy ; Humans ; Intestinal Obstruction ; surgery ; Intestine, Small ; surgery ; Laparoscopy ; Laparotomy
4.Chinese expert consensus on the diagnosis and treatment of small bowel obstruction (2023 edition).
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2023;26(5):401-409
Small bowel obstruction is a common surgical acute abdomen, with high rates of missed diagnosis, misdiagnosis, mortality and disability. The majority of patients with small bowel obstruction can be relieved by early non-operative treatment and intestinal obstruction catheter. However, there are still many controversies about the window of observation, the time of emergency operation and the method of operation. In recent years, the basic and clinical research on small bowel obstruction has made further progress, but there is no authoritative reference in clinical practice, and there is no relevant consensus and guidelines to standardize the diagnosis and treatment of small bowel obstruction in China. Accordingly, on the initiative of the Chinese Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition and Enhanced Recovery after Surgery Branch of China International Health Care Promotion Exchange Association. The experts in this field of our country constitute the editorial committee, and refer to the main results of the current domestic and foreign research. According to the GRADE system of evidence quality assessment and recommendation intensity grading, the Chinese expert consensus on the diagnosis and treatment of small bowel obstruction was formulated for the study and reference of related specialties. It is expected to improve the overall level of diagnosis and treatment of small bowel obstruction in our country.
Humans
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Consensus
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Enteral Nutrition
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Intestinal Obstruction/surgery*
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Parenteral Nutrition
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China
5.Left Paraduodenal Hernia Presenting with Atypical Symptoms.
Min Young YUN ; Yun Mi CHOI ; Sun Keun CHOI ; Sei Joong KIM ; Seung Ick AHN ; Kyung Rae KIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2010;51(5):787-789
Paraduodenal hernias are a rare congenital malformation, but they are the most common internal hernias. They develop secondary to a failure in midgut rotation, which may lead to small bowel obstruction or other clinical manifestations. The authors recently experienced a case of a left paraduodenal hernia presenting with unusual symptoms of left flank pain and vomiting.
Adult
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Hernia/*complications/*diagnosis/pathology/surgery
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Humans
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Intestinal Obstruction/*etiology/surgery
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Male
7.Intestinal obstruction in infancy due to mesenteric cyst--a case report.
Singapore medical journal 1987;28(6):566-568
Anastomosis, Surgical
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Humans
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Ileostomy
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Infant
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Intestinal Obstruction
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etiology
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surgery
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Male
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Mesenteric Cyst
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complications
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congenital
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pathology
;
surgery
8.Surgical innovation for refractory constipation (Jinling procedure): a long-term follow-up of its safety and efficacy.
Jun JIANG ; Xiao-bo FENG ; Wei-wei DING ; Jian-lei LIU ; Xiong-hui HU ; Ning LI ; Jie-shou LI
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2011;14(12):925-929
OBJECTIVETo propose a novel surgical procedure for refractory constipation, namely Jinling procedure, and to explore its safety and efficacy through long-term follow-up.
METHODSA total of 614 patients with refractory constipation were admitted to the Department of General Surgery between February 2000 and June 2011. Five hundred and fifty-four patients received Jinling procedure and were included in this study. The general clinical data, complications after Jinling procedure, gastrointestinal quality of life index (GIQLI), Wexner constipation scale and satisfaction rate during follow-up were collected.
RESULTSNo operation-associated death occurred. Increased bowel movement frequency was observed during the perioperative period. Temporary difficulty in urination occurred in 24.5% of the patients. Other complications included small bowel obstruction (9.6%), anastomotic bleeding (8.1%), anastomotic leakage (3.1%), sexual dysfunction (3.1%), and wound infection (3.1%). Most postoperative complications were managed conservatively. The most recent follow-up was on August 2011, and the follow-up rate was 100%, 88.8%, 75.1%, 56.3% at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months after surgery. GIQLI temporarily increased from 78.1±9.4 preoperatively to 92.0±9.5 at 3 months follow-up, but continued to decrease during the follow-up at the 6 months (48.4±14.1), 12 months (21.0±4.3), and 24 months (20.0±3.4). Wexner constipation scale decreased from 19.9±4.3 preoperatively to 8.4±2.1 at 3 months follow-up (P<0.01). The low Wexner scale sustained until 24 months after operation. The satisfaction rate at the 3, 6,12 and 24 months follow-up was 78.1%, 91.1%, 94.2% and 94.6%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONJinling procedure provides refractory constipation patients with a novel, safe and effective surgical option.
Constipation ; surgery ; Follow-Up Studies ; Humans ; Intestinal Obstruction ; surgery ; Quality of Life ; Treatment Outcome
9.Meta-analysis of safety and efficacy of self-expending metallic stents as bridge to surgery versus emergency surgery for left-sided malignant colorectal obstruction.
Ri-sheng ZHAO ; Hui WANG ; Lei WANG ; Mei-jin HUANG ; Dian-ke CHEN ; Jian-ping WANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2012;15(7):697-701
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the safety and efficacy of self-expending metallic stents (SEMS) as bridge to surgery versus emergency surgery for left-sided malignant colorectal obstruction.
METHODSA comprehensive literature search of CENTRAL, PubMed, EMBASE, Medline, Ovid LWW, CMB, CNKI and Wanfang Databases were performed for all randomized controlled trials or retrospective studies comparing self-expending metallic stents as bridge to surgery(SABS group) with emergency surgery (ES group). A meta-analysis was carried out by RevMan5.1 software on the outcomes concerning safety and efficacy of the two groups.
RESULTSFourteen studies matched the criteria including 1083 patients. Five were randomized controlled trials and nine were retrospective analysis. Compared with the ES group, the SABS group had a lower short-term mortality(RR=0.52, 95% CI:0.30-0.93, P<0.05), lower overall complications(RR=0.46, 95% CI:0.31-0.70, P<0.05), higher resection rate(RR=1.90, 95%CI:1.33-2.70, P<0.01), shorter operative time(MD=-59.77, 95%CI:-87.51--32.04, P<0.01), and shorter interval to first flatus(MD=-10.78, 95%CI:-16.67--4.90, P<0.01). There were no statistically significant differences between the two groups in permanent stomy and hospital stay.
CONCLUSIONThe safety and efficacy of self-expending metallic stents as bridge to surgery for left-sided malignant colorectal obstruction is superior to emergency surgery.
Colectomy ; Colorectal Neoplasms ; complications ; surgery ; Emergencies ; Humans ; Intestinal Obstruction ; etiology ; surgery ; Stents ; Treatment Outcome
10.A rare case of abdominal cocoon presenting as umbilical hernia.
Yu ZHANG ; Wei-Dong LIU ; Jian-Tai HE ; Qin LIU ; Deng-Gao ZHAI
Chinese Medical Journal 2015;128(10):1415-1417
Adult
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Hernia, Umbilical
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diagnosis
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surgery
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Humans
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Intestinal Obstruction
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diagnosis
;
surgery
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Male