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Outcomes of Different Surgical Procedures After High Level Resection for Patients With Small Intestinal Gangrene

A

Assiut University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Small Bowel Gangrene
Strangulated Hernia
Mesenteric Artery Ischemia

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06759727
small bowel gangrene surgery

Details and patient eligibility

About

In this cohort study, aim to evaluate and compare short-term postoperative outcomes of different surgical procedures for patients with intestinal gangrene who underwent high level small bowel resection (< 150 cm from DJ).

Full description

Patients with intestinal gangrene have a high mortality rate depending on etiology, degree, and length of an ischemic part, associated comorbidity, and time between the onset of symptoms and final diagnosis. This overall mortality ranges from 50 to 80%. When intestinal gangrene is evident or suspected, surgical laparotomy is mandatory, where the affected segment is resected, and the remaining part is either anastomosed or diverted on the anterior abdominal wall as stoma.

Small bowel anastomoses performed in the emergency settings have a high risk of anastomotic leakage. The leak rate in these settings may reach 35% . Intestinal gangrene is usually associated with peritonitis and sepsis. The performance of ostomy or intestinal anastomosis in cases of peritonitis or sepsis is a controversial theme. This controversy increases when proximal small bowel is involved .

Stomas avoid the risks of anastomotic leakage and re-operation and permit close examination of the bowel by inspection. However, creating stoma after proximal level of resection is associated with catastrophic sequels of high output fistula and short bowel syndrome. Hence, most of the time the risk of a high jejunal anastomosis dehiscence is preferred to the metabolic complications associated with ostomy .

A jejunostomy was defined as having less than 200 cm of proximal remaining small bowel. Since most nutrients are absorbed within the first 100-150 cm of the jejunum, the severity of short bowel syndrome and dependence on TPN is markedly increased if a jejunostomy is created at less than 150 cm from DJ . Distal refeeding of chyme "re-feeding enteroclysis", by reinfusing the chyme collected from the proximal stoma into the downstream small bowel through the distal stoma, was used by some surgeons to alleviate the complications of jejunostomy before re-establishment of digestive continuity . However, this procedure can be technically demanding. On the other hand, some authors prefer to use prophylactic tube enterostomy with primary anastomosis in cases of high risk of anastomotic leak .

The choice between these surgical technical varieties depends upon general health status of the patient, and local abdominal factors e.g. presence of peritoneal contamination, but mostly depends on surgeons' experience.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

    1. Distance of proximal resection margin less than 150 cm from DJ. 2) Mesenteric vascular ischemia. 3) Strangulating obstruction e.g. due to hernia, volvulus, band, etc.

Exclusion criteria

    1. Patients less than 18 years. 2) Patients with malignant disease. 3) Patients with almost all small bowel loops resected (< 60 cm remaining).

Trial design

40 participants in 4 patient groups

Group A: Primary anastomosis: using hand sewing technique
Group B: Primary anastomosis with prophylactic tube enterostomy. Feeding jejunostomy may be inserted
Group C: Jejunostomy: double barrel stoma.
Group D: Jejunostomy: double barrel stoma with distal refeeding via the mucous fistula opening.

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

mohamed mohamed Abdelsayed, garduate

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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