In a series of 27 patients who required surgery for distal colonic lesions, primary bowel resection with immediate anastomosis after intraoperative antegrade colonic irrigation was performed. The technique of on-table lavage was similar to that described by Dudley and Radcliffe in 1980; however, some new technical details are introduced to minimize fecal contamination. There were 17 men and 10 women (mean age, 68.5 years). Twenty patients were admitted for obstructing carcinoma of the left colon; 11 underwent immediate surgery, while the remaining 9 underwent delayed surgery after 12 hours of intravenous fluids and nasogastric suction. Of the remaining seven patients, five had perforated sigmoid diverticula and diffuse peritonitis and two had obstructing diverticular disease of the left colon with remarkable bowel distention. One hospital mortality occurred secondary to a ruptured aortic aneurysm. The radiologic anastomotic leakage rate was 14.8 percent. Clinical anastomotic dehiscence was not observed.
The potential role of hyperthermochemotherapeutic pelvic wash as an additional regional treatment in locally advanced rectal cancer and the differences between the two methods, in our limited experience, are discussed.
The intracholedochal pressure changes induced by timepidium bromide were studied in 12 patients who had undergone surgery because of gall bladder stones and were receiving transient external bile drainage by the Kehr method. Cholangiomanometric examination, carried out under basal conditions and after an intravenous dose of 15 mg timepidium bromide, revealed a statistically significant decrease in mean intracholedochal pressure in all 12 patients. It is concluded that timepidium bromide is likely to exert a direct action on the sphincter of Oddi, decreasing its basal tone and thus causing a decrease in intracholedochal pressure.
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