101. Surgical care of the pediatric Crohn’s disease patient
- Author
-
Dylan Stewart
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatric Crohn's disease ,Disease ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Crohn Disease ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Intensive care medicine ,Crohn's disease ,Adult patients ,business.industry ,Surgical care ,Disease progression ,Pediatric Surgeon ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Emergencies ,business - Abstract
Despite the significant advances in the medical management of inflammatory bowel disease over the last decade, surgery continues to play a major role in the management of pediatric Crohn's disease (CD). While adult and pediatric Crohn's disease may share many clinical characteristics, pediatric Crohn's patients often have a more aggressive phenotype, and the operative care given by the pediatric surgeon to the newly diagnosed Crohn's patient is very different in nature to the surgical needs of adult patients after decades of disease progression. Children also have the unique surgical indication of growth failure to consider in the overall clinical decision making. While surgery is never curative in CD, it has the ability to transform the disease process in children, and appropriately timed operations may have tremendous impact on a child's physical and mental maturation. This monograph aims to address the surgical care of Crohn's disease in general, with a specific emphasis on the surgical treatment of small intestinal and ileocecal involvement.
- Published
- 2017
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