14 results on '"Cima, Robert R."'
Search Results
2. Surgical Management of Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis
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Cima, Robert R., Pemberton, John H., and Baumgart, Daniel C., editor
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- 2012
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3. Laparoscopic-Assisted vs. Open Ileal Pouch-Anal Anastomosis: Functional Outcome in a Case-Matched Series
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Larson, David W., Dozois, Eric J., Piotrowicz, Karen, Cima, Robert R., Wolff, Bruce G., and Young-Fadok, Tonia M.
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- 2005
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4. Wide Variation and Overprescription of Opioids After Elective Surgery.
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Thiels, Cornelius A., Anderson, Stephanie S., Ubl, Daniel S., Hanson, Kristine T., Bergquist, Whitney J., Gray, Richard J., Gazelka, Halena M., Cima, Robert R., and Habermann, Elizabeth B.
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Objective: We aimed to identify opioid prescribing practices across surgical specialties and institutions. Background: In an effort to minimize the contribution of prescription narcotics to the nationwide opioid epidemic, reductions in postoperative opioid prescribing have been proposed. It has been suggested that a maximum of 7 days, or 200mg oral morphine equivalents (OME), should be prescribed at discharge in opioid-naïve patients. Methods: Adults undergoing 25 common elective procedures from 2013 to 2015 were identified from American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program data from 3 academic centers in Minnesota, Arizona, and Florida. Opioids prescribed at discharge were abstracted from pharmacy data and converted into OME. Wilcoxon Rank-Sum and Kruskal-Wallis tests assessed variations. Results: Of 7651 patients, 93.9% received opioid prescriptions at discharge. Of 7181 patients who received opioid prescriptions, a median of 375 OME (interquartile range 225-750) were prescribed. Median OME varied by sex (375 men vs 390 women, P = 0.002) and increased with age (375 age 18-39 to 425 age 80þ, P < 0.001). Patients with obesity and patients with non-cancer diagnoses received more opioids (both P < 0.001). Subset analysis of the 5756 (75.2%) opioid-naïve patients showed the majority received >200 OME (80.9%). Significant variations in opioid prescribing practices were seen within each procedure and between the 3 medical centers. Conclusions: The majority of patients were overprescribed opioids. Significant prescribing variation exists that was not explained by patient factors. These data will guide practices to optimize opioid prescribing after surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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5. Returns to Operating Room After Colon and Rectal Surgery in a Tertiary Care Academic Medical Center: a Valid Measure of Surgical Quality?
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Lightner, Amy, Glasgow, Amy, Habermann, Elizabeth, Cima, Robert, Lightner, Amy L, Glasgow, Amy E, Habermann, Elizabeth B, and Cima, Robert R
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TERTIARY care ,OPERATING rooms ,SURGERY ,COLON surgery ,RECTAL surgery ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CLINICAL medicine ,DIGESTIVE organ surgery ,REOPERATION ,STATISTICS ,SURGICAL complications ,DATA analysis ,SPECIALTY hospitals ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Introduction: Returns to the operating room (ROR) have been suggested as a marker of surgical quality. Increasingly, quality and value metrics are utilized for reimbursement as well as public reporting to inform health care consumers. We sought to understand the etiology of ROR and assess the validity of simple ROR as a quality metric.Methods: This was a single referral center retrospective review of all colon and rectal operations between January 1, 2014 and December 31, 2014. Surgical Systems Nurse + was constructed and validated at our institution for classifying ROR as either an unplanned return to the OR, planned return due to complications, planned staged return, or an unrelated return. The primary outcome was the classification of ROR and total number of ROR within 30 days.Results: Of the 2389 colorectal patients who underwent surgery between January 1, 2014 and December 31, 2014; 214 returned to the operating room within 30 days (9.0%). Among the 214 patients, there were a total of 232 ROR with an average of 1.1 ROR per patient (range 1-4); 90 (38.8%) were unplanned ROR, 49 (21.1%) were planned returns due to complications, 92 (39.7%) were planned staged returns, and 1 (0.4%) were unrelated ROR. The most common reason for an unplanned ROR was an anastomotic leak (n = 21; 9.1%). Overall, unplanned reoperations were rare events (n = 90/2389; 3.8%), largely comprised of patients experiencing an anastomotic abscess or leak (n=21/2389; 0.9%).Conclusions: In a high volume and complexity academic colon and rectal surgery practice, RORs within 30 days occurred after 10.4% of cases. Unplanned ROR were relatively rare and most commonly associated with an anastomotic leak. Since the majority of ROR were planned-staged returns, overall rate of ROR should be questioned as a metric of surgical quality. Perhaps, the anastomotic leak rate may be a better metric to monitor for quality improvement efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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6. Effect of massage therapy on pain, anxiety, relaxation, and tension after colorectal surgery: A randomized study.
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Dreyer, Nikol E., Cutshall, Susanne M., Huebner, Marianne, Foss, Diane M., Lovely, Jenna K., Bauer, Brent A., and Cima, Robert R.
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The purpose of this randomized controlled trial was to evaluate the effect of postoperative massage in patients undergoing abdominal colorectal surgery. One hundred twenty-seven patients were randomized to receive a 20-min massage (n = 61) or social visit and relaxation session (no massage; n = 66) on postoperative days 2 and 3. Vital signs and psychological well-being (pain, tension, anxiety, satisfaction with care, relaxation) were assessed before and after each intervention. The study results indicated that postoperative massage significantly improved the patients' perception of pain, tension, and anxiety, but overall satisfaction was unchanged. In conclusion, massage may be beneficial during postoperative recovery for patients undergoing abdominal colorectal surgery. Further studies are warranted to optimize timing and duration and to determine other benefits in this clinical setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. A Novel Technique for the Repair of Urostomal Hernias Using Human Acellular Dermal Matrix
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Mitchell, Christopher R. and Cima, Robert R.
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OPERATIVE surgery , *ABDOMINAL wall , *HERNIA surgery , *PLASTIC surgery , *SURGICAL complications , *PROSTHETICS , *BIOMEDICAL materials , *SURGERY - Abstract
Objective: To report a new technique to reconstruct the abdominal wall at the site of the hernia with 2 separate layers of human acellular dermal matrix (hADM). Parastomal hernia is the most commonly encountered complication of ileal conduit urinary diversion, occurring at a rate of 5%-25%. Multiple methods of parastomal hernia repair, including primary fascial repair, mesh repair, and stoma resiting have been reported, with a wide variety of approaches and materials being used. Methods: Between 2008 and 2009, 4 patients underwent surgical repair of urostomal hernias using hADM (LifeCell, Branchburg, NJ). All were operated on by a single surgeon using a standard technique of open repair whereby the posterior and anterior rectus fascia at the stoma site were reconstructed with hADM. Demographic data, preoperative and intraoperative risk factors, immediate postoperative complications, and hernia recurrence were collected and analyzed. Results: Four patients underwent urostomal hernia repair with Alloderm without intraoperative complications. Mean operative time was 261.25 ± 80.8 minutes. Mean hospital stay was 9 ± 3 days. With an average of 270 ± 104-days'' follow-up, there were no recurrent hernias detected. Conclusions: In patients with urostomal hernia, reconstruction of the stoma site and abdominal wall with hADM appears to be a safe and effective management solution and avoids the difficulty with relocating the urostomy or placing prosthetic material in the site. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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8. Timing and Indications for Colectomy in Chronic Ulcerative Colitis: Surgical Consideration.
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Cima, Robert R.
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Total proctocolectomy (TPC) cures a patient of the intestinal manifestation of chronic ulcerative colitis. The timing of surgery during the illness will influence the choice of operation, the frequency of post-operative complications, and the long-term functional outcomes. Surgery is divided into emergency, urgent, and elective procedures. Emergency cases are performed for complications of fulminant colitis: hemorrhage, perforation, toxic megacolon or sepsis. A subtotal colectomy (STC) with a Brooke ileostomy (BI) is the procedure of choice. STC removes the bulk of the disease, allows the patient's health to be restored, medication to be withdrawn, and permits a future restorative operation. Urgent operations occur in hospitalized patients with continued symptoms after seven days of maximal medical therapy. Once again the preferred operation is a STC-BI. Indications for elective colectomy include: persistent symptoms despite maximal medical therapy, medication side-effects, persistent chronic disease state, dysplasia/malignancy. Elective surgical options include TPC-BI, TPC with ileal-pouch anal anastomosis (IPAA), or STC-BI. The choice of operation is based upon patient preference and preoperative physiologic and functional status. Factors associated with increased post-operative complications are weight loss >10%, multiple preoperative blood transfusions, albumin <3.0 gm/dl, and degree of immuno-suppression. In high-risk patients, STC-BI should be performed. IPAA can be performed later after the patient's health is restored. In conclusion, numerous factors affect the timing and choice of operation in patients with CUC. Avoiding complications in IPAA patients is essential as they negatively impact the long-term function and durability of the IPAA. Copyright © 2010 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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9. Incidence and Characteristics of Potential and Actual Retained Foreign Object Events in Surgical Patients
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Cima, Robert R., Kollengode, Anantha, Garnatz, Janice, Storsveen, Amy, Weisbrod, Cheryl, and Deschamps, Claude
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SURGERY , *DECISION making in clinical medicine , *X-rays , *RADIATION - Abstract
Background: Incidence of retained foreign objects (RFOs) after operations is unknown, as many can go unrecognized for years. We reviewed the incidence and characteristics of surgical RFO events at a tertiary care institution during 4 years. Study Design: All RFO events, near misses and actual, reported on an adverse event line during 2003 to 2006 were reviewed. Results: During 2003 to 2006, there were 191,168 operations performed, with 68 reported events resulting in a potential RFO defect rate of 0.356/1,000 patients. After review, 34 patients had no RFOs (near misses) and 34 were actual RFOs, resulting in a true RFO defect rate of 0.178/1,000 operations or approximately 1:5,500 operations. In the near-miss patient, needles were miscounted 76% of the time. In the 34 actual RFO patients, items retained were 23 sponges (68%), 7 miscellaneous other items (20%), 3 needles (9%), and 1 instrument (3%). The 34 actual RFOs occurred in incidents where the count had been reported as correct in 21 patients (62%). In 18 patients where an RFO was eventually discovered, intraoperative imaging detected only 12 objects (67%). In operations involving a body cavity, our practice is to obtain a high-resolution x-ray survey film, in a dedicated x-ray suite, before entering the recovery room. Twenty RFOs were identified from survey films and all occurred in patients with correct counts. No RFOs occurred during emergency or high blood-loss procedures and none resulted in demonstrable clinical harm. Two patients left the hospital with an RFO. Twenty-two patients (64.8%) underwent reoperation, with 1 object not removed, 6 (17.6%) retrieved without operation, and 6 (17.6%) where the clinical decision was not to remove. Conclusions: RFOs at an institution that routinely performs postprocedure x-rays indicate that RFOs can occur more frequently than expected from the literature. The majority occur in patients with correct counts. Relying on counting as the primary mechanism to avoid RFOs is unreliable, and investigating new technologies designed to achieve reliable counts is warranted. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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10. Medical and Surgical Management of Chronic Ulcerative Colitis.
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Cima, Robert R. and Pemberton, John H.
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ULCERATIVE colitis ,COLITIS ,INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases ,SURGERY - Abstract
Discusses the medical and surgical management of chronic ulcerative colitis (CUC), a mucosal inflammatory process limited to the rectum and the colon. Major diseases processes of idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease; Etiology of the diseases; Approximate number of people in the United States diagnosed as having CUC.
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- 2005
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11. Postoperative Venous Thromboembolism in Colon and Rectal Cancer: Do Tumor Location and Operation Matter?
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McKenna, Nicholas P., Bews, Katherine A., Behm, Kevin T., Habermann, Elizabeth B., and Cima, Robert R.
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THROMBOEMBOLISM risk factors , *ENOXAPARIN , *VEINS , *PULMONARY embolism , *COLON (Anatomy) , *COLECTOMY , *SURGICAL complications , *CONTINUING education units , *SURGERY , *PATIENTS , *DISEASE incidence , *FISHER exact test , *COLORECTAL cancer , *VENOUS thrombosis , *RISK assessment , *CONTINUING medical education , *CANCER patients , *RECTUM , *THROMBOEMBOLISM , *ABDOMINOPERINEAL resection , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LOW-molecular-weight heparin , *DATA analysis software , *DISEASE risk factors ,THROMBOEMBOLISM prevention - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Existing venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk scores help identify patients at increased risk of postoperative VTE who warrant extended prophylaxis in the first 30 days. However, these methods do not address factors unique to colorectal surgery, wherein the tumor location and operation performed vary widely. VTE risk may extend past 30 days. Therefore, we aimed to determine the roles of tumor location and operation in VTE development and evaluate VTE incidence through 90 days postoperatively. STUDY DESIGN: Adult patients undergoing surgery for colorectal cancer between January 1, 2005, and December 31, 2021, at a single institution were identified. Patients were then stratified by cancer location and by operative extent. VTEs were identified using diagnosis codes in the electronic medical record and consisted of extremity deep venous thromboses, portomesenteric venous thromboses, and pulmonary emboli. RESULTS: A total of 6,844 operations were identified (72% segmental colectomy, 22% proctectomy, 6% total (procto)colectomy), and tumor location was most commonly in the ascending colon (32%), followed by the rectum (31%), with other locations less common (sigmoid 16%, rectosigmoid junction 9%, transverse colon 7%, descending colon 5%). The cumulative incidence of any VTE was 3.1% at 90 days with a relatively steady increase across the entire 90-day interval. Extremity deep venous thromboses were the most common VTE type, accounting for 37% of events, and pulmonary emboli and portomesenteric venous thromboses made up 33% and 30% of events, respectively. More distal tumor locations and more anatomically extensive operations had higher VTE rates. CONCLUSIONS: When considering extended VTE prophylaxis after colorectal surgery, clinicians should account for the operation performed and the location of the tumor. Further study is necessary to determine the optimal length of VTE prophylaxis in high-risk individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Using Bundled Interventions to Reduce Surgical Site Infection After Major Gynecologic Cancer Surgery.
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Johnson, Megan P., Kim, Sharon J., Langstraat, Carrie L., Jain, Sneha, Habermann, Elizabeth B., Wentink, Jean E., Grubbs, Pamela L., Nehring, Sharon A., Weaver, Amy L., McGree, Michaela E., Cima, Robert R., Dowdy, Sean C., and Bakkum-Gamez, Jamie N.
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GYNECOLOGIC cancer , *SURGERY , *INFECTION , *CHLORHEXIDINE , *ISOPROPYL alcohol , *CEFAZOLIN , *FASCIAE (Anatomy) - Abstract
Objective: To investigate whether implementing a bundle, defined as a set of evidence-based practices performed collectively, can reduce 30-day surgical site infections.Methods: Baseline surgical site infection rates were determined retrospectively for cases of open uterine cancer, ovarian cancer without bowel resection, and ovarian cancer with bowel resection between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2012, at an academic center. A perioperative bundle was prospectively implemented during the intervention period (August 1, 2013, to September 30, 2014). Prior established elements were: patient education, 4% chlorhexidine gluconate shower before surgery, antibiotic administration, 2% chlorhexidine gluconate and 70% isopropyl alcohol coverage of incisional area, and cefazolin redosing 3-4 hours after incision. New elements initiated were: sterile closing tray and staff glove change for fascia and skin closure, dressing removal at 24-48 hours, dismissal with 4% chlorhexidine gluconate, and follow-up nursing phone call. Surgical site infection rates were examined using control charts, compared between periods using χ or Fisher exact test, and validated against the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program decile ranking.Results: The overall 30-day surgical site infection rate was 38 of 635 (6.0%) among all cases in the preintervention period, with 11 superficial (1.7%), two deep (0.3%), and 25 organ or space infections (3.9%). In the intervention period, the overall rate was 2 of 190 (1.1%), with two organ or space infections (1.1%). Overall, the relative risk reduction in surgical site infection was 82.4% (P=.01). The surgical site infection relative risk reduction was 77.6% among ovarian cancer with bowel resection, 79.3% among ovarian cancer without bowel resection, and 100% among uterine cancer. The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program decile ranking improved from the 10th decile to first decile; risk-adjusted odds ratio for surgical site infection decreased from 1.6 (95% confidence interval 1.0-2.6) to 0.6 (0.3-1.1).Conclusion: Implementation of an evidence-based surgical site infection reduction bundle was associated with substantial reductions in surgical site infection in high-risk cancer procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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13. Perceived Impact of the 80-Hour Workweek: Five Years Later 1
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Dozois, Eric J., Holubar, Stefan D., Tsikitis, Vassiliki L., Malireddy, Kishore, Cima, Robert R., Farley, David R., and Larson, David W.
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MEDICAL care , *HOSPITAL medical staff , *WORKWEEK , *QUALITY of life , *PATIENT education , *MEDICAL care surveys - Abstract
Background: We aimed to assess perceptions of the effects of the 80-hour workweek (80hWW) restriction on patient care, education, and resident quality of life. Materials and Methods: In April 2007, attending surgeons and residents in nine surgical specialties at our institution were surveyed. Respondents were categorized into three groups: (1) attending surgeons; (2) residents beginning their training before the 80hWW implementation (ResBefore); and (3) residents beginning training after the 80hWW implementation (ResAfter). Differences between groups were assessed with univariate analysis. Results: The overall response rate was 57%. A minority in all three groups (≤33%) believed the 80hWW improved patient care. Fifteen percent of attending surgeons, 30% of ResBefore, and 67% of ResAfter believed patients were safer (P < 0.001). Eighty-three percent of attending surgeons, 74% of ResBefore, and 41% of ResAfter (P < 0.001) believed continuity of care was compromised. All groups (≥84%) agreed that midlevel providers were now critical to successfully deliver health care (P = 0.40). Fewer attending surgeons (21%) and ResBefore (29%) perceived improvements in education compared with ResAfter (68%; P <0.001). A majority perceived improved work-life balance for residents (attending surgeons [85%], ResBefore [71%], and ResAfter [92%]; P = 0.008), but 76% of attending surgeons reported decreased job satisfaction. Conclusion: We showed a discrepancy between perceptions of attending surgeons and residents regarding the effect of the 80hWW on patient care and surgical education. Quality of life was improved for residents but not for attending surgeons. The impact of the 80hWW on patient care and surgical education needs to be quantified. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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14. Loop ileostomy reversal after colon and rectal surgery: a single institutional 5-year experience in 944 patients
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Rajesh Pendlimari, Gaetano Luglio, Heidi Nelson, Robert R. Cima, Stefan D. Holubar, Luglio, Gaetano, Pendlimari, Rajesh, Holubar, Stefan D, Cima, Robert R, and Nelson, Heidi
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Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Colonic Disease ,Databases, Factual ,Time Factor ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anastomosis ,Cohort Studies ,Ileostomy ,Colonic Diseases ,Medicine ,Humans ,Defecation ,Aged ,Univariate analysis ,business.industry ,Rectal Disease ,Perioperative ,Recovery of Function ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Colorectal surgery ,Surgery ,Rectal Diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesia ,Diverticular disease ,Female ,Cohort Studie ,business ,Human - Abstract
Background Diverting loop ileostomy is used to mitigate the sequelae of anastomotic dehiscence. Objective To report the rate of complications after ileostomy reversal using standardized definitions to aid physicians who are deciding whether to divert anastomoses. Methods Patients who underwent diverting loop ileostomy closure from January 1, 2005, through February 28, 2010, were identified using a prospective database. Perioperative variables and 30-day outcomes were reviewed. Complications were graded according to the Clavien-Dindo Classification, in which grade III, IV, or V represents major complications. Univariate analysis assessed the relationship between operative variables and surgical outcomes. Results A total of 944 patients underwent reversal: 43.1% were women, the mean age was 47.2 years, the mean body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared) was 25.7, and 18.5% were American Society of Anesthesiologists class III or IV. Indications for the initial operation were ulcerative colitis (49.5%), rectal cancer (27.5%), diverticular disease (6.8%), and other (16.1%). Anastomotic technique for reversal was sutured fold-over in 466 patients (49.4%), stapled in 315 (33.4%), and handsewn end to end in 163 (17.3%). After reversal, the mean time to first bowel movement, tolerance of soft diet, and discharge from hospital was 2.6, 3.7, and 5.2 days, respectively. Handsewn cases had longer operative times and longer times to bowel movement, soft diet, and discharge. Overall, complications occurred in 203 patients (21.5%), including 45 patients (4.8%) who experienced a major complication; there were no deaths within 30 days. Conclusion Ileostomy closure is associated with a low rate of major grade III and IV complications and should be reserved for patients who have a predicted postoperative major complication rate of 5% or more without diversion.
- Published
- 2011
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