Nonspecific Inflammation after New Surgical Procedures: The 'Pouchitis' Syndrome
Author(s) -
SF Philips
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
canadian journal of gastroenterology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1916-7237
pISSN - 0835-7900
DOI - 10.1155/1990/195423
Subject(s) - pouchitis , medicine , ulcerative colitis , proctocolectomy , etiology , inflammatory bowel disease , pouch , disease , ileostomy , malaise , complication , diarrhea , surgery , gastroenterology
The advent of a surgical alternative to conventional end ileostomy for patients requiring proctocolectomy for inflammatory bowel disease(IBD) offered new hope to many with intractable disease. The continent ileostomy(Kock pouch) and ileoanal pouch procedure have now been established,though they still are not standard approaches. Nonspecific inflammation('pouchitis') is an important complication in 10 to 30% of such operations. Theetiology is unknown, and the syndrome may even be heterogeneous; recurrentIBD, bacterial overgrowth and stasis are most often incriminated. Diarrhea,bleeding, malaise and even the extraintestinal features of IBD may occur. Thoughmost patients respond to antibiotics or anti-inflammatory drugs, the pathogenesisof pouchitis poses major unanswered questions. This is perhaps the major challengeto IBD surgery at the present time
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