Abstract | PURPOSE: Although the functional outcome after low anterior resection for rectal cancer using colonic J-pouch reconstruction is superior to that using conventional straight reconstruction, the one drawback of colonic J-pouch reconstruction is difficulty with evacuation. Recently it has been suggested that construction of a larger colonic J-pouch causes the evacuation difficulty. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the cause of evacuation difficulty with colonic J-pouch reconstruction. METHODS: We compared pouchography of 26 patients with 10-cm colonic J-pouch reconstructions (10-J group) and 27 patients with 5-cm colonic J-pouch reconstructions (5-J group) at three months, one year, and two years after surgery. Functional assessments were performed one year postoperatively. Clinical function was evaluated using a questionnaire. Evacuation function was evaluated by the balloon expulsion and saline evacuation tests. RESULTS: The greatest width of the pouch in the 10-J group in the anteroposterior view was significantly greater than that in the 5-J group at all three measurement times (3 months, 4.9 vs. 4 cm; P = 0.0011; 1 year, 9 vs. 5.6 cm; P < 0.0001; 2 years, 9.2 vs. 5.8 cm; P < 0.0001). The value in the 10-J group at one year after surgery was 1.9 times that at three postoperative months; in the 5-J group this ratio was 1.4. There was a significant difference between these ratios (P < 0.0001). No significant difference existed between the values at two years and one year after surgery in either the 10-J or the 5-J group. An evacuation difficulty was significantly more common in the 10-J group than the 5-J group. Evacuation function in the 10-J group was significantly inferior to that in the 5-J group. CONCLUSIONS: The evacuation difficulty observed in patients with larger colonic J-pouch reconstructions is associated with excessive distention of the pouch occurring within one year of surgery.
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Authors | J Hida, M Yasutomi, T Maruyama, T Tokoro, T Wakano, T Uchida |
Journal | Diseases of the colon and rectum
(Dis Colon Rectum)
Vol. 42
Issue 9
Pg. 1181-8
(Sep 1999)
ISSN: 0012-3706 [Print] United States |
PMID | 10496559
(Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
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Topics |
- Adult
- Anal Canal
(diagnostic imaging)
- Follow-Up Studies
- Humans
- Ileum
(diagnostic imaging)
- Proctocolectomy, Restorative
- Radiography
- Rectal Neoplasms
(surgery)
- Treatment Outcome
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