Results of Surgery for Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Further Survey of One Hospital Region
- 16 February 1974
- Vol. 1 (5902), 264-268
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.5902.264
Abstract
Case records have been studied for the results of surgery in 294 patients operated on for inflammatory bowel disease during 1967-72 at 34 non-teaching hospitals within the North-east Metropolitan Hospital Region. All patients treated surgically for acute colitis and those treated for chronic disease by total colectomy were included. The postoperative mortality of the primary surgery was 23·7%. The mortality was 2·1% in patients treated by elective operation, 37·6% in patients coming to urgent operation, and 60·9% in patients treated by emergency operation. The three most important factors affecting the mortality were considered to be: increasing age of the patient, the presence of established colonic dilatation, and preoperative perforation of the colon.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ulcerative Colitis Treated by Ileostomy and Excisional Surgery Fifteen Years' Experience at St. Mark's HospitalBritish Journal of Surgery, 1972
- The Causes of Late Mortality in IleostomistsProceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1972
- Ileostomy and excisional surgery for chronic inflammatory disease of the colon: A survey of one hospital region: Part I Results and complications of surgeryGut, 1971
- CORTICOSTEROIDS IN PREOPERATIVE MEDICAL MANAGEMENT OF ULCERATIVE COLITIS DO THEY AFFECT SURGICAL SUCCESS ?The Lancet, 1960