首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Ogilvie's syndromeColonoscopic decompression and analysis of predisposing factors
Ogilvie's syndromeColonoscopic decompression and analysis of predisposing factors

 

作者: Allen Jetmore,   Alan Timmcke,   Byron Gathright,   Terrell Hicks,   John Ray,   James Baker,  

 

期刊: Diseases of the Colon & Rectum  (OVID Available online 1992)
卷期: Volume 35, issue 12  

页码: 1135-1142

 

ISSN:0012-3706

 

年代: 1992

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: Colon;Pseudo‐obstruction;Ogilvie's;Colonoscopy;Decompression

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

&NA;Forty‐eight cases of Ogilvie's syndrome, colonic pseudoobstruction, presenting between 1983 and 1989 were retrospectively reviewed to assess the results of colonoscopic decompression and to identify potential etiologic factors. Three patients had spontaneous resolution with medical treatment. Forty‐five patients required 60 colonoscopic decompressions: 38 (84 percent) were successfully treated using colonoscopy; five (11 percent) required an operation; and two died within 48 hours of colonoscopy from medical causes. No complications or deaths were the result of colonoscopy. Twenty‐nine patients (64 percent) were successfully treated with a single colonoscopy. One‐third of patients required serial decompressions. Average cecal diameter in patients with successful colonoscopic decompression was 12.4 cm but was larger for patients requiring more than one colonoscopy (13.3 cm) and for those who failed colonoscopic therapy (13.4 cm). The spine or retroperitoneum had been traumatized or manipulated in 52 percent of patients. Patients with Ogilvie's syndrome were being treated with narcotics (56 percent), H‐2 blockers (52 percent), phenothiazines (42 percent), calcium‐channel blockers (27 percent), steroids (23 percent), tricyclic antidepressants (15 percent), and epidural analgesics (6 percent) at diagnosis. Electrolyte abnormalities included hypocalcemia (63 percent), hyponatremia (38 percent), hypokalemia (29 percent), hypomagnesemia (21 percent), and hypophosphatemia (19 percent). Colonoscopic decompression in Ogilvie's syndrome is safe and effective management. Multiple pharmacologic and metabolic factors, as well as spinal and retroperitoneal trauma, appear to alter autonomic regulation of colonic function, resulting in colonic pseudo‐obstruction.

 

点击下载:  PDF (1013KB)



返 回