Surgeons is dedicated to assuring high-quality patient care by advancing the science, prevention, and management of disorders and diseases of the colon, rectum, and anus. The Standards Committee is composed of Society members who are chosen because they have demonstrated expertise in the specialty of colon and rectal surgery. This Committee was created to lead international efforts in defining quality care for conditions related to the colon, rectum, and anus. This is accompanied by developing Clinical Practice Guidelines based on the best available evidence. These guidelines are inclusive, and not prescriptive. Their purpose is to provide information on which decisions can be made, rather than dictate a specific form of treatment. These guidelines are intended for the use of all practitioners, health care workers, and patients who desire information about the management of the conditions addressed by the topics covered in these guidelines. It should be recognized that these guidelines should not be deemed inclusive of all proper methods of care or exclusive of methods of care reasonably directed to obtaining the same results. The ultimate judgment regarding the propriety of any specific procedure must be made by the physician in light of all of the circumstances presented by the individual patient.
Nine hundred ten patients undergoing colectomy for colon cancer were studied retrospectively. Seventy-four cancers (8 percent) were located at the splenic flexure. The stage at presentation was no different between splenic flexure cancers and colon carcinomas at other sites. Although splenic flexure cancers had twice the incidence of obstruction as did other colon cancers and obstruction in the overall series adversely affected survival, there was no difference in survival between splenic flexure cancer patients and patients with other colon cancers.
A retrospective study of 83 patients undergoing surgery for diverticular disease over two years at a colorectal specialty hospital was undertaken to assess the safety of resection. No patient had free perforation. Eighty-nine percent of 46 patients with neither abscess nor fistula underwent resection and primary anastomosis, the remainder undergoing other resectional therapy; there was no mortality in this group. Of the 37 patients with abscesses, fistulas, or both, all had resections with or without primary anastomoses and one of these 37 patients died (2.7 percent mortality). In the entire series of 83 patients, the operative mortality was 1.2 percent, although 69 percent had morbidity. Resection can be performed safely for diverticulitis, and primary anastomosis can be safely added in uncomplicated and selected complicated cases.
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