The author reports a personal series of 347 patients with colon interposition grafting as an esophageal substitute, the majority of them carried out for corrosive pharyngoesophageal strictures (284) followed by malignancy (54). A personal philosophy is exposed, based on increased flexibility in the choice of the type of colic interposition depending on the pattern of blood supply. This mobile policy called 'balanced operation' is opposed to the classic rigid approach based on the use of a single procedure of esophagocoloplasty. The author's choice is the ileocecum with long ileal loop (65 cm), favoring preservation of the ileocecal valve, and conferring an antireflux mechanism. In particular cases the cecum may be removed and an ileal graft carried out. If this arrangement is not feasible one should slide toward the left in a clockwise direction performing a left colon interposition (iso- or antiperistaltic). Overall mortality was of 16 cases (4.6%). Morbidity is analyzed and different particular arrangements like continuous colic loop, superlong graft, Roux-en-Y procedure are described. A general outline of pharyngeal reconstruction in corrosive strictures is presented.
We present herein the exceedingly uncommon case of a patient with cicatricial pemphigoid (CP) who gradually developed conjunctival, oral, and esophageal involvement. Despite long-term medical management with dapsone and disulone, the ocular lesions progressed to produce further scarring, which led to ankyloblepharon, symblepharon, and ultimately, blindness of the right eye. After a period of 5 years the patient developed a total esophageal stricture, intractable by dilation, necessitating esophageal reconstruction. The details of an original procedure using a continuous colic loop are described, highlighting the better tolerance of this technique by a high-risk patient. A discussion on the recent advances in diagnosing bullous dermatoses is presented following this case report.
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