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1. |
Practice parameters for the prevention of venous thromboembolism |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1037-1047
Frederick Denstman,
Ann Lowry,
Anthony Vernava,
Marcus Burnstein,
Victor Fazio,
Edward Glennon,
Terry Hicks,
Neil Hyman,
Bruce Kerner,
John Kilkenny,
Richard Moore,
Greg Oliver,
Walter Peters,
Theodore Ross,
Paul Savoca,
Peter Senatore,
Clifford Simmang,
Douglas Wong,
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摘要:
&NA;It should be recognized that these guidelines should not be deemed inclusive of all proper methods of care or exclusive of methods of care reasonably directed to obtaining the same results. The ultimate judgment regarding the propriety of any specific procedure must be made by the physician in light of all of the circumstances presented by the individual patient.
ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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2. |
Internal sphincterotomy is superior to topical nitroglycerin in the treatment of chronic anal fissureResults of a randomized, controlled trial by the canadian colorectal surgical trials group |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1048-1055
C. Richard,
R. Gregoire,
E. Plewes,
R. Silverman,
C. Burul,
D. Buie,
R. Reznick,
T. Ross,
M. Burnstein,
B. O'Connor,
D. Mukraj,
R. McLeod,
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摘要:
PURPOSE:This was a multicenter, randomized, controlled trial to compare the effectiveness of topical nitroglycerin with internal sphincterotomy in the treatment of chronic anal fissure.METHODS:Patients with symptomatic chronic anal fissures were randomly assigned to 0.25 percent nitroglycerintidor internal sphincterotomy. Both groups received stool softeners and fiber supplements and were assessed at six weeks and six months.RESULTS:Ninety patients were accrued, but 8 were excluded from the analysis because they refused internal sphincterotomy after randomization (6), the fissure healed before surgery (1), or a fissure was not observed at surgery (1). There were 38 patients in the internal sphincterotomy group (22 males; mean age, 40.3 years) and 44 patients in the nitroglycerin group (15 males; mean age, 38.7 years). At six weeks 34 patients (89.5 percent) in the internal sphincterotomy group compared with 13 patients (29.5 percent) in the nitroglycerin group had complete healing of the fissure (P=5 × 10−8). Five of the 13 patients in the nitroglycerin group relapsed, whereas none in the internal sphincterotomy group did. At six months fissures in 35 (92.1 percent) patients in the internal sphincterotomy group compared with 12 (27.2 percent) patients in the nitroglycerin group had healed (P=3 × 10−9). One (2.6 percent) patient in the internal sphincterotomy group required further surgery for a superficial fistula compared with 20 (45.4 percent) patients in the nitroglycerin group who required an internal sphincterotomy (P=9 × 10−6). Eleven (28.9 percent) patients in the internal sphincterotomy group developed side effects compared with 37 (84 percent) patients in the nitroglycerin group (P<0.0001). Nine (20.5 percent) patients discontinued the nitroglycerin because of headaches (8) or a severe syncopal attack (1).CONCLUSIONS:Internal sphincterotomy is superior to topical nitroglycerin 0.25 percent in the treatment of chronic anal fissure, with a high rate of healing, few side effects, and low risk of early incontinence. Thus, internal sphincterotomy remains the treatment of choice for chronic anal fissure.
ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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3. |
Invited editorial |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1055-1058
Robin Phillips,
R. McLeod,
C. Richard,
R. Gregoire,
E. Plewes,
R. Silverman,
C. Burul,
D. Buie,
R. Reznick,
T. Ross,
M. Burnstein,
B. O'Connor,
D. Mukraj,
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ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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4. |
Randomized, controlled trial of topical phenylephrine for fecal incontinence in patients after ileoanal pouch construction |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1059-1063
Emin Carapeti,
Michael Kamm,
John Nicholls,
Robin Phillips,
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摘要:
INTRODUCTION:Fecal incontinence is experienced by some patients with an ileoanal reservoir pouch. The&agr;1‐adrenergic agonist phenylephrine raises resting anal sphincter pressure in healthy volunteers and may be of value in these patients.METHODS:Twelve patients (7 female), median age 44 (range, 29‐67) years were studied. All had fecal incontinence despite a noninflamed pouch of normal size and ultrasonographically structurally normal anal sphincter muscles. Patients were treated with topical 10 percent phenylephrine and placebo gels, allocated in random order in a double‐blind, crossover study for two four‐week periods. Before and during treatment, maximum resting anal sphincter pressure and anodermal blood flow were measured, a symptom questionnaire was completed, and incontinence score was determined using a validated scale.RESULTS:Six of 12 (50 percent) patients improved subjectively after phenylephrine compared with one on placebo (P=0.07). Four patients had complete cessation of incontinence with active treatment. Phenylephrine significantly reduced the incontinence score (P=0.015). It also resulted in a significant rise in mean maximum resting anal sphincter pressure when compared with placebo (P=0.012). For all 12 patients, mean percent subjective improvement was higher after phenylephrine compared with placebo (P=0.04). There were no side effects.CONCLUSIONS:Topical phenylephrine significantly improves fecal continence in patients with an ileoanal pouch. In some patients it totally eliminates nocturnal episodes. The mechanism of benefit is likely to be one of altered neural sphincter control. This is the first study of the use of a topical pharmacologic agent to treat fecal incontinence and may have a wider application.
ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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5. |
Is local excision adequate therapy for early rectal cancer? |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1064-1071
Anders Mellgren,
Prayuth Sirivongs,
David Rothenberger,
Robert Madoff,
Julio García‐Aguilar,
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摘要:
PURPOSE:Radical surgery of rectal cancer is associated with significant morbidity, and some patients with low‐lying lesions must accept a permanent colostomy. Several studies have suggested satisfactory tumor control after local excision of early rectal cancer. The purpose of this study was to compare recurrence and survival rates after treating early rectal cancers with local excision and radical surgery.METHODS:One hundred eight patients with T1 and T2 rectal adenocarcinomas treated by transanal excision were compared with 153 patients with T1N0 and T2N0 rectal adenocarcinomas treated with radical surgery. Neither group received adjuvant chemoradiation. Mean follow‐up time was 4.4 years after local excision and 4.8 years after radical surgery.RESULTS:The estimated five‐year local recurrence rate was 28 percent (18 percent for T1 tumors and 47 percent for T2 tumors) after local excision and 4 percent (none for T1 tumors and 6 percent for T2 tumors) after radical surgery. Overall recurrence was also higher after local excision (21 percent for T1 tumors and 47 percent for T2 tumors) than after radical surgery (9 percent for T1 tumors and 16 percent for T2 tumors). Twenty‐four of 27 patients with recurrence after local excision underwent salvage surgery. The estimated five‐year overall survival rate was 69 percent after local excision (72 percent for T1 tumors and 65 percent after T2 tumors) and 82 percent after radical surgery (80 percent for T1 tumors and 81 percent for T2 tumors). Differences in survival rate between local excision and radical surgery were statistically significant in patients with T2 tumors.CONCLUSIONS:Local excision of early rectal cancer carries a high risk of local recurrence. Salvage surgery is possible in most patients with local recurrence, but may be effective only in patients with T1 tumors. When compared with radical surgery, local excision may compromise overall survival in patients with T2 rectal cancers.
ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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6. |
Invited editorial |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1071-1074
Glenn Steele,
Anders Mellgren,
Prayuth Sirivongs,
David Rothenberger,
Robert Madoff,
Julio García‐Aguilar,
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ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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7. |
Usefulness of endorectal ultrasound after preoperative radiotherapy in rectal cancerComparison between sonographic and histopathologic changes |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1075-1083
Margherita Gavioli,
Alberto Bagni,
Italo Piccagli,
Salvatore Fundaro',
Gianni Natalini,
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摘要:
PURPOSE:Our aim was to assess the advantages of endorectal ultrasound after preoperative radiotherapy in rectal cancer, its reliability in tumoral staging, and its capacity to identify completely sterilized lesions.METHODS:From 1994 to 1997, 29 patients with rectal cancer were systematically subjected to endorectal ultrasound before and after preoperative radiotherapy. Each patient was administered 30 to 50 Gy, followed by surgery six to eight weeks after completion of radiotherapy. Endorectal ultrasound was performed using a biplanar (linear and sectorial) endorectal probe. The morphologic, quantitative, and echo‐pattern changes of the irradiated tumor were examined. Results of ultrasound findings before and after radiotherapy and a histologic examination of the surgical specimens were compared. Histopathologic studies were used to evaluate macromicroscopical radiation‐induced changes, case by case. A comparison between tumoral shrinkage and fibrotic replacement was made using the semiquantitative Dworak's method.RESULTS:Morphologically and quantitatively, postradiation endorectal ultrasound showed the reappearance of anatomic cleavage planes, a considerable shrinkage of the tumor, and in low rectal tumors, an increase in the distance from the anorectal ring in more than 50 percent of the cases. These data had a direct influence on surgical treatment. Histologic examination showed that, in 28 out of 29 cases, fibrosis was the most dominant component of the irradiated lesions, varying by more than 50 to 100 percent of the lesion (four cases pTO). A comparison of postradiation endorectal ultrasound with histopathology revealed that fibrosis became the morphologic basis of ultrasound images; therefore, after radiotherapy, what endorectal ultrasound staged was no longer the tumor but the extent of fibrosis in the rectal wall. A histopathologic examination showed that the residual tumor, when present, was always within the fibrosis, never outside or separate from it. Postradiation endorectal ultrasound showed echo‐pattern changes. Some of the changes (more echogenic and non‐homogeneous lesions) were histologically related to the persistence of the tumor to a considerable degree; other changes (reappearance of parietal layers) were related to complete sterilization of lesions in two of three cases.CONCLUSIONS:From the morphologic and quantitative point of view, postradiation endorectal ultrasound provides oncologists and surgeons useful information to assess treatment effectiveness and plan the surgical approach. From the tumor staging point of view, our report presents a completely new concept: that six to eight weeks after radiotherapy, endorectal ultrasound no longer stages the tumor, but rather the fibrosis that takes its place. However, postradiation endorectal ultrasound is a valid tool, because the extent of fibrosis in the rectal wall is a direct indication of the depth of residual cancer. A residual tumor, when present, is always inside the fibrosis. Finally, however, as regards the capacity of endorectal ultrasound to exclude or indicate complete sterilization of the lesion, the actual significance of the echo‐pattern changes we observed needs to be assessed further by studies on a large number of cases.
ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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8. |
Significance of a normal surveillance colonoscopy in patients with a history of adenomatous polyps |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1084-1091
David Blumberg,
Frank Opelka,
Terry Hicks,
Alan Timmcke,
David Beck,
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摘要:
PURPOSE:The aim of this study was to determine the appropriate surveillance for patients with a history of adenomatous polyps whose last colonoscopic examination was normal.METHODS:This was a retrospective review of a database of 7,677 colonoscopies (1990 to 1996). In patients under colonoscopic surveillance, we reviewed cases of patients who had received three colonoscopies (an index (initial) colonoscopy positive for adenomas and 2 follow‐up colonoscopies (interim and final)). The risk of adenomas and cancers at final follow‐up colonoscopy was compared between patients having a normal interim colonoscopy and those with a positive interim colonoscopy. The risk at final colonoscopy was also stratified by time interval and the size and number of adenomas at the initial index colonoscopy.RESULTS:Two hundred four patients undergoing surveillance for adenomas met inclusion criteria. At index colonoscopy the median polyp size was 1 cm and median frequency was three polyps. At all follow‐up colonoscopies, we detected 493 adenomas and one cancer (median follow‐up, 55 months). At 36 months patients with a normal interim colonoscopy (n=91) had significantly fewer polyps than patients with a positive interim colonoscopy (n=113; 15vs.40 percent;P=0.0001). By 40 months, adenomas were detected in more than 40 percent of patients in both groups. The risk after a normal interim colonoscopy was not affected by time interval or number or size of polyps. Adenomas found subsequent to a normal interim colonoscopy were dispersed throughout the colon in 28 patients and isolated to the rectosigmoid in 6 patients.CONCLUSIONS:In patients with a history of adenomas, a normal follow‐up colonoscopy is associated with a statistically but not clinically significant reduction in the risk of subsequent colonic neoplasms. These patients require follow‐up surveillance colonoscopy at a four‐year to five‐year interval.
ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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9. |
Invited editorial |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1091-1092
James Church,
David Beck,
David Blumberg,
Terry Hicks,
Frank Opelka,
Alan Timmcke,
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ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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10. |
Synchronous and “early” metachronous colorectal adenocarcinomaAnalysis of prognosis and current trends |
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Diseases of the Colon & Rectum,
Volume 43,
Issue 8,
2000,
Page 1093-1099
Han‐Shiang Chen,
Shyr‐Ming Sheen‐Chen,
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摘要:
PURPOSE:We evaluated the accuracy of preoperative diagnostic examinations and determined whether patients with synchronous colorectal cancers differ from patients with a single colorectal malignancy in clinicopathologic factors, the possibility of early metachronous colorectal cancer, and postoperative outcome.METHODS:A retrospective evaluation of 1,780 patients with primary colorectal adenocarcinoma from 1987 to 1993 was performed. We divided patients into three groups: Group 1, single colorectal adenocarcinoma; Group 2, synchronous colorectal adenocarcinoma; and Group 3, early metachronous colorectal adenocarcinoma.RESULTS:There were 52 cases (3 percent) in Group 2 and 13 cases (1 percent) in Group 3 (<3 years from the index colorectal cancer operation). Differences in age, gender, and cancer‐free rate among the three groups did not reached statistical significance. Compared with cancers in Group 1, significantly more proximal tumor locations and early cancer stage were noted for the second and third cancers in Group 2. In Group 3 a significantly more proximal tumor site was noted for the index colorectal cancer but cancer stage showed no significant difference from cancers in Group 1. Better histologic type was also noted in the index and second cancers in Group 2 than in cancers in Group 1. There was a higher incidence of associated benign adenoma in Group 2 (35vs.15 percent in Group 1). The positivity rate of Group 2 was significantly higher by preoperative colonoscopy (71 percent) and incidental findings at surgery (58 percent) than barium enema examination (30 percent).CONCLUSION:Preoperative barium enema examination was an unsatisfactory tool for detecting synchronous tumors. Preoperative colonoscopy demonstrated a higher positivity rate, but it still failed to detect nearly 30 percent of cases with synchronous tumors. Intraoperative palpation of the whole colorectum could detect nearly 60 percent of unexpected synchronous tumors. We believe both colonoscopy and intraoperative palpation of the whole colorectum are crucial to the early detection of synchronous colorectal cancer.
ISSN:0012-3706
出版商:OVID
年代:2000
数据来源: OVID
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