The outcome of 727 patients presenting with solitary colorectal carcinoma over a seven-year period is reviewed. Of the patients, 52 per cent were females 45 per cent were over 70 years and 31 per cent had an emergency admission. Of the tumors, 43 per cent occurred in the rectum and 40 per cent were stage D (not treated curatively). Predisposing causes included inflammatory bowel disease (n = 12) and abdominal irradiation (n = 6); associated adenomatous polyps were present in 22 per cent of resection specimens. Hospital mortality rates (20 per cent overall) were adversely affected by emergency admission (36 per cent), age greater than 70 years (29 per cent) and advanced, stage D disease (31 per cent). Corrected overall five-year survival rate was 32 per cent and, after curative resection, 59 per cent. Of patients in whom curative resection included contiguous organs, 47 per cent survived five years. Survival was reduced in patients over 70 years (26 per cent), in emergency admissions (24 per cent), in poorly differentiated tumors (18 per cent), and if tumor fixity was present (14 per cent). Factors contributing to a favorable outlook included a long history (greater than one year) and a tumor situated in the left colon. Recurrence developed in 47 per cent of patients surviving curative resection and was seldom diagnosed at a curable stage.
Dietary supplementation with calcium reduces colonic crypt cell production rates in both normal and hyperplastic mucosa. Calcium can bind intraluminally with bile salts and fatty acids thus reducing their mitogenic effect. The protective role of oral calcium on intestinal carcinogenesis (induced by azoxymethane) was tested in 60 male Sprague-Dawley rats submitted to either 80 per cent mid jejuno-ileal resection (n = 30) or jejunal transection (n = 30). Half the rats in each group received calcium lactate 24 g/l added to their drinking water. Rats were killed 25-27 weeks postoperatively. Enterectomy increased colonic tumour yield by 60-106 per cent (P = 0.002-0.005) and duodenal tumour yield by 70-86 per cent. Calcium abolished this effect at both sites, halving intestinal tumour yields in rats with both transection and resection (P less than 0.05). Doubling the dietary intake of calcium inhibits experimental carcinogenesis.
SUMMARY The role of goblet cells in the adaptive response of the intestine to jejunoileal bypass was studied in rats submitted to an 85% end-to-side jejunoileal bypass or sham bypass. At 36 weeks the length and wet weight of the duodenum and large bowel was 13-48% greater in animals with jejunoileal bypass. Measurements of villous height and crypt depth confirmed mucosal hyperplasia in the residual functioning small bowel and the distal colon. Histochemical studies in both groups of rats showed an overall predominance of sulphomucins throughout the intestinal tract, but jejunoileal bypass caused a disproportionate increase in the number of sialomucin containing goblet cells in functioning segments of small bowel and distal colon. An abundance of sialomucin cells at the site of anastomosis after jejunoileal bypass may have been a protective response to local mechanical trauma. Goblet cell hyperplasia is a feature of compensatory growth of the intestinal tract after surgical shortening. The changes in colonic mucin seen after jejunoileal bypass resemble those observed in ulcerative colitis and mucosal dysplasia.After subtotal small bowel bypass in experimental animals or in patients with morbid obesity, the short segments of jejunum and ileum that remain in contact with the nutrient stream undergo sustained hyperplasia. 1-3 Readily detectable to the naked eye, this compensatory growth is characterised by dilatation and lengthening of the functioning bowel and an increased mucosal mass. Major enteric resections are known to cause hyperplasia of the stomach, duodenum, and colon in addition to the residual small bowel;2 3 our preliminary data suggest similar growth of the duodenum and colon after subtotal enteric bypass.4The response of individual cell types within the adapting intestinal epithelium has attracted much less attention than the overall phenomenon, though both Monari (1896) and Flint (1912)
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