Although jejunal diverticulosis is a rare entity and usually asymptomatic, it may cause chronic symptoms and acute complications. Because of the rarity of the entity, diagnosis is often delayed, resulting in unnecessary morbidity and mortality. The purpose of this study was to draw attention to jejunal diverticula and their complications. The medical records of 8 consecutive patients with complications due to small-bowel diverticula treated at our department during the past 4 years were reviewed. All diverticula were located in the jejunum. Seven patients had acute complications, 3 patients had an intra-abdominal abscess, 2 had free perforation with diffuse peritonitis, 1 had a bowel occlusion and 1 patient had concomitant bleeding and occlusion. One patient presented with chronic symptoms. A preoperative diagnosis of jejunal diverticula, before explorative laparotomy, was not reached in any of the 7 patients with acute symptoms. In the patient with chronic symptoms, multiple jejunal diverticula complicated by a jejuno-colic fistula and foreign body were found at laparotomy. On patient died of multiorgan failure. Small-bowel diverticulosis is a rare entity, but it should not be regarded as a clinically insignificant finding. It may be difficult to make a preoperative diagnosis. Patients with incidentally detected proximal jejunal diverticula, at imaging studies or at laparotomy, warrant close observation and awareness that the diverticula may cause serious complications.
Twenty-eight consecutive patients with a first attack of alcohol-induced pancreatitis were studied using contrast-enhanced CT. The findings on CT were then related to the course of the disease. The patients with acute hemorrhagic-necrotizing pancreatitis showed significantly lower enhancement values of the pancreatic parenchyma than those with milder forms of the disease. The next 20 patients with severe pancreatitis were scanned using a slightly modified procedure. The enhancement values were calculated and plotted on the graphs for the 2 former groups. Two categories of pancreatic enhancement were found: "low enhancement" and "high enhancement." In all 10 patients with "low-enhancement" values surgery revealed hemorrhagic-necrotizing pancreatitis. In the 10 patients with "high-enhancement" values conservative treatment was continued, and the clinical course was nonfulminant in all of them.
Twenty-one patients with acute fulminant alcoholic pancreatitis were randomly allocated to either pancreatic resection group (11 patients) or nonoperative peritoneal lavage group (10 patients). Only patients under 50 years were included in the study to minimize the role of other severe disease. These patients represented the most severe cases of acute pancreatitis at our Department, constituting only 2% of all patients with acute pancreatitis during this period. The diagnosis was based on clinical symptoms and on signs indicating severely impaired systemic organ functions. All patients underwent contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT), which showed contrast enhancement below 30 Hounsfield units. In the operated cases, the diagnosis of necrotizing pancreatitis was verified histologically. All patients with conservative treatment had dark brown fluid at peritoneal puncture. There was a difference (nonsignificant) in mortality (3/11 and 1/10, respectively), complication rate, or in the need of reoperations between the groups. Nonoperative peritoneal lavage was followed with shorter treatment at the intensive care unit (16.2 versus 25.9 days, respectively). The hospital stay also was significantly shorter in the nonoperative group (44.3 versus 56.1 days). The results indicate that intensive conservative treatment is justified as an initial therapy even in the most severe cases of acute pancreatitis.
No abstract
The results of partial gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y reconstruction in the treatment of persistent or recurrent oesophagitis after failed Nissen fundoplication in six patients were analysed. There were no postoperative deaths. Postoperative complications (pneumonia and atelectases, postoperative ileus) developed in three patients. The results were evaluated by clinical and endoscopic examination 1 to 3.5 years after the operation. Clear clinical and endoscopic improvement was observed in five of the six patients. In the remaining patient the procedure failed to prevent progression of the oesophagitis with development of a Barrett's oesophagus. The results suggest that a partial gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y reconstruction is an effective and safe procedure in the treatment of persistent or recurrent oesophagitis after failed Nissen fundoplication.
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