Postoperative adhesions account for 64–79% of admissions with small bowel obstruction (SBO). The aim of this study was to identify the operative procedures and the types of adhesions that cause SBO. A retrospective analysis of all patients with an admission diagnosis of acute adhesive SBO between January 1982 and December 1990 was performed. One hundred and nineteen patients had 144 admissions with an initial diagnosis of acute SBO due to adhesions. The previous operations were: appendicectomy 23.3%; colorectal resection 20.8%; gynaecological surgery 11.7%; upper gastrointestinal (gastric, biliary or splenic) surgery 9.2%; small bowel surgery 8.3%; and more than one previous abdominal operation 23.6%. Sixty‐one admissions required surgery to relieve the SBO. Eighteen patients had strangulated small bowel. All but two of these patients had a single band adhesion causing the SBO and associated strangulation. Band adhesions were commonly found following appendicectorny, colorectal resections or gynaecological operations. Seventeen of the 21 patients with previous surgery for a colorectal malignancy had benign adhesions causing the SBO, while four of the six patients with either previous ovarian or previous gastric carcinoma had recurrent malignancy causing the SBO. Five patients had previously undiagnosed carcinomas (three ovarian and two caecal) as the cause of the SBO.
Small bowel obstruction (SBO) due to adhesions is often initially treated non‐operatively but the safety and duration of non‐operative treatment is controversial. The aims of this study were to assess the safety of non‐operative treatment and determine the optimal duration of non‐operative treatment in adhesive SBO. A retrospective analysis of patients admitted with a diagnosis of adhesive SBO following an initial period of non‐operative treatment was performed. Patients whose condition resolved with non‐operative treatment were compared with patients who required surgical intervention after an initial period of non‐operative treatment. There were 123 admissions having an initial period of non‐operative treatment. The SBO resolved in 85, the remaining 38 required surgical intervention. Complete resolution occurred within 48 h in 75 (88%) cases, the remaining 10 had resolved by 72 h. Thirty‐one of 38 patients required surgical intervention for SBO more than 48 h duration after admission. The difference between cases resolving within 48 h and those requiring surgery after 48 h was significant (x2= 113, P < 0.001). Three (2.4%) patients, initially treated non‐operatively, had small bowel strangulation. All three were operated on within 24 h of admission when changes in clinical findings suggested small bowel strangulation may be present. There were no deaths in the group having an initial period of non‐operative treatment. In the absence of any signs of strangulation, patients with an adhesive SBO can be managed safely with non‐operative treatment. Most cases of adhesive SBO that will resolve, do so within 48 h of admission. In the absence of any clinical or radiological evidence of resolution within 48 h, non‐operative treatment should be abandoned in favour of surgical intervention.
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is rapidly becoming accepted as the best method for the treatment of symptomatic cholelithiasis. Randomized clinical trials comparing laparoscopic cholecystectomy with open cholecystectomy are unlikely to be performed. In order to compare these two operations, surgeons need an historical control group of patients who have undergone a conventional open cholecystectomy. The aim of this study was to document a control group of patients having an open cholecystectomy and compare them with patients having a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. This was achieved by a retrospective study of all patients who had an open cholecystectomy from January 1985 to December 1989. Four hundred and fifty‐seven patients, 345 women and 112 men, had a cholecystectomy. Exploration of the common bile duct (ECBD) was performed in 59 (12.5%) cases. The mean operative duration was 73 min for cholecystectomy and 118 min for cholecystectomy and ECBD. The shortest mean postoperative stay was for an elective cholecystectomy (5.3 days) and the longest mean postoperative stay was for urgent admissions requiring ECBD (12.0 days). Operative dissection was difficult in 14.1% of elective cases and 51.8% of urgent cases. Ninety‐seven (19.5%) patients had an additional procedure, unrelated to cholelithiasis, at the same operation; 44 did not require laparotomy, 31 had interval appendicectomies, and 22 other cases required laparotomy in order to perform the additional procedure. All but one patient required postoperative narcotic analgesia. The mean duration of narcotic analgesia was 2.3 days. The complication rate was 35.2% for cholecystectomy and 62.5% for ECBD. If pulmonary atelectasis is excluded as a complication, these complication rates fell to 6.8% and 20.1%, respectively. There was one right hepatic duct injury and no postoperative deaths. Comparison of these results with the published results for laparoscopic cholecystectomy revealed that although open cholecystectomy takes less time to perform, it is associated with a longer postoperative stay, greater narcotic analgesic requirements and more respiratory complications.
Eighty patients with benign gastric ulcer treated by vagotomy and pyloroplasty in a district general hospital are reviewed. There were no postoperative deaths in the patients undergoing elective surgery but 8 deaths in those undergoing emergency surgery for massive bleeding (38 per cent). Eighty-three per cent of patients had a result that was classed as good or satisfactory. Recurrent gastric ulceration was found in 8 per cent and a tendency to late asymptomatic ulcer recurrence is identified. Careful long term follow-up, including endoscopic re-examination, is advocated for patients undergoing conservative operations for benign gastric ulcer.
Duodenal injury following blunt abdominal trauma is uncommon. The severity of injury can vary from an intramural haematoma to a duodenal rupture with associated transection of the pancreatic duct. A case of duodenal rupture with avulsion of the ampulla of Vater is presented and discussed.
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