Objective Conventional Milligan-Morgan haemorrhoidectomy is associated with significant pain and potentially hazardous complications. Doppler-Guided Haemorrhoidal Artery Ligation (DGHAL) may offer a lower risk, pain-free alternative. We present our early and longterm outcome experience with DGHAL, combined with patient views and satisfaction with the procedure.Method One hundred and thirteen DGHALs were performed over a 13 month period by two surgeons in a single centre. Patients graded the severity of postoperative pain on visual-analogue scales. Clinical follow-up was at 6 weeks (n = 103), with long-term follow-up (n = 90) by postal questionnaire at median of 30 months.Results Seven out of one hundred and three (6%) patients reported postoperative discomfort requiring analgesia. Ninety-three out of one hundred and three (90%) patients reported complete relief or significant improvement in their symptoms at 6 weeks, dropping to 77 ⁄ 90 (86%) at 30 months. Anal fissures developed in 2 ⁄ 103 (2%) patients, both treated with Diltiazem ointment. Further surgery was required in 8 ⁄ 90 (9%) patients. Eighty-two out of ninety (91%) patients said they would undergo DGHAL again.Conclusion DGHAL is a relatively painless, safe, and effective procedure for symptomatic stage I-III haemorrhoids, for which we have demonstrated long-term durability and acceptability. Its role lies between office based procedures and more invasive operative interventions.
Of 292 patients, excision of the tumour with replacement by stomach or jejunum was carried out in 216 in whom the lesion was considered operable on both technical and general grounds, intubation was performed in 45 and the remaining 31 were managed without operation. Of the 216 in whom resection was performed, only 20 per cent were free from local spread, lymph node involvement or secondary deposits at the time of operation. Hospital mortality was 18 per cent and did not significantly differ between one 5-year period and another. Survival at 1 year was 54 per cent, at 2 years 25 per cent and at 5 years 14 per cent. The average length of survival following intubation was 2.6 months and following non-operative management 2.8 months. The poor average survival of between 3.5 and 5 months obtained in those patients with secondary deposits at the time of resection suggests that resection is of questionable value in this group. There was a marked difference in survival following Roux loop procedures compared with upper partial gastrectomy for tumours of the lower third and cardia in patients without lymph node involvement or secondary deposits, strongly suggesting that upper partial gastrectomy, although a rather simpler and quicker operation, is not the operation of choice in these patients. On 31 December 1976, after a minimum follow-up of 1 year, there were only 22 patients still alive of the original 292 (7.5 per cent).
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