Does mesorectal preservation protect the ileoanal anastomosis after restorative proctocolectomy?

Categoria Primary study
GiornaleJournal of gastrointestinal surgery : official journal of the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract
Year 2009
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The technique of rectal dissection during restorative proctocolectomy might influence the rate of septic complications. The aim of this study was to analyze the morbidity of restorative proctocolectomy in a consecutive series of patients who had rectal dissection with complete preservation of the mesorectum. One hundred thirty-one patients who had restorative proctocolectomy for chronic inflammatory bowel disease with handsewn ileopouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) and preservation of the mesorectal tissue were analyzed by chart reviews and a follow-up investigation at a median of 85 (14-169) months after surgery. Only one of 131 patients had a leak from the IPAA, and one patient had a pelvic abscess without evidence of leakage, resulting in 1.5% local septic complications. All other complications including the pouch failure rate (7.6%) and the incidence of both fistula (6.4%) and pouchitis (47.9%) were comparable to the data from the literature. The low incidence of local septic complications in this series might at least in part result from the preservation of the mesorectum. As most studies do not specify the technique of rectal dissection, this theory cannot be verified by an analysis of the literature and needs further approval by a randomized trial. © 2008 The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
Epistemonikos ID: 0e8551296c7d9ac01513ff0ccdb2116fd98aa479
First added on: Oct 22, 2012