15 results on '"I. Bremer"'
Search Results
2. Suture button reconstruction of the central band of the interosseous membrane in Essex-Lopresti lesions: a comparative biomechanical investigation
- Author
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Lars Peter Müller, J. Andermahr, I. Bremer, Kilian Wegmann, Michael Hackl, Andreas Prescher, J. Borggrefe, and Manfred Staat
- Subjects
Joint Instability ,Male ,Joint Dislocations ,030230 surgery ,Lesion ,Weight-Bearing ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Forearm ,Cadaver ,Medicine ,Humans ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Aged, 80 and over ,030222 orthopedics ,Sutures ,Interosseous membrane ,business.industry ,Suture button ,Biomechanics ,Anatomy ,Wrist Injuries ,Internal Fixators ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Surgery ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Radius Fractures - Abstract
Surgical reconstruction of the interosseous membrane may restore longitudinal forearm stability in Essex-Lopresti lesions. This study aimed to compare the longitudinal stability of the intact forearm with a single-bundle and a double-bundle reconstruction of the central band of the interosseous membrane using digital image correlation with a three-dimensional camera system. Single and cyclic axial loading of eight fresh-frozen forearm specimens was carried out in the intact state, after creation of an Essex-Lopresti lesion, after a single-bundle and after a double-bundle reconstruction of the central band using a TightRope® (Arthrex GmbH, Munich, Germany) construct. Instability significantly increased after creation of an Essex-Lopresti lesion. The stability of intact specimens was similar to both reconstruction techniques. The results of this study suggest that TightRope® reconstruction of the central band restores longitudinal forearm stability. However, the single-bundle technique may be less reliable than double-bundle reconstruction. Level of evidence: Basic Science Study
- Published
- 2016
3. A 42-Year-Old Male with Diabetes Insipidus
- Author
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Wolfgang Saeger, Christian Bernreuther, Jens Aberle, T Minnemann, I Bremer Pais, Christian Hagel, Jörg Flitsch, and C Iking-Konert
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Germinoma ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Diabetes insipidus ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Dietary amino acids fed in free form or as protein do differently affect amino acid absorption in a rat everted sac model
- Author
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M.W.A. Verstegen, I. G. S. Peeters, R.E. Koopmanschap, B. I. Bremer, V.V.A.M. Schreurs, J. A. Nolles, and R. Moorman
- Subjects
Male ,retention ,Time Factors ,Animal Nutrition ,whole-body nitrogen ,digestion rate ,Biology ,brush-border membrane ,mouse intestine ,Intestinal absorption ,Random Allocation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Methionine ,Food Animals ,Leucine ,milk protein ,Casein ,Animals ,Food science ,Amino Acids ,Rats, Wistar ,Animal nutrition ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Metabolism ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Animal Feed ,Diervoeding ,Rats ,Amino acid ,Dose–response relationship ,Intestinal Absorption ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Human and Animal Physiology ,growth-performance ,transport ,WIAS ,ingestion ,Fysiologie van Mens en Dier ,Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Dietary Proteins ,metabolism - Abstract
In the present study, the effect of free amino acid (FAA) diets on the intestinal absorption rate of methionine and leucine was studied 'ex vivo' with rats adapted for different periods of time to the diets, using the everted sac method. The adaptation period to the 21% FAA diet with an amino acid content based on casein was either, 0 (no adaptation, N-ADA), 5 (short-term adaptation, ST-ADA), or 26-33 days (long-term adaptation, LT-ADA). Within the ST-ADA and the LT-ADA groups, three different levels of methionine were included: 50%, 100% and 200% of the level normally present in casein. All diets were iso-nitrogenous and iso-caloric. After the adaptation period (0, 5, or 26-33 days), intestinal everted sacs were prepared. Methionine or leucine was added to the medium as transport substrate. The methionine absorption rate of the rats of the LT-ADA groups was higher than that of the N-ADA groups. Furthermore, adaptation to 200% dietary methionine levels caused a significantly slower leucine absorption compared to the 100%, and 50% group. Methionine absorption was similar in the 100% and 200% groups, but the absorption of methionine in the 50% group was enhanced in the distal part of the intestines. We concluded that in response diets with 21% FAAs as only amino acid source, amino acid absorption is decreased to avoid toxic effects of high levels of methionine in the circulation.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. 334 What is it like to be an adolescent with cystic fibrosis? Reversing the roles of patient and health-professional
- Author
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K. van der Vegte, S. van Geelen, I. Bremer-Ophorst, S. Aufenacker-van Bethlehem, L. Segers, and B. Arets
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health professionals ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,Explanatory model ,Treatment process ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Cystic fibrosis ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Health care ,medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health ,Medical anthropology ,business - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was understand the treatment itinerary of Brazilian scholar children with Cystic Fibrosis from their perspective and was supported for the medical anthropology framework. Methods: Data was collected through 15 months following with 7 scholar children, both sex, with CF and their families, with the ethnographic method. Data were analyzed with the hermeneutic framework. Conclusion: CF is part of the life experience of the children and so, it’s an important issue of their existence. It has an important role in the decisions of plenty issues like the period of school, the kind of sport that the kid will do and the daily life routine. Most of children did not know clearly what the disease is and nether their treatment and medications names and functions and reported never have been included in his health treatment discussion, what can lead to poor adherence and high dependence to do the daily treatment. Children also have their own explanatory model for the disease and it is different from those of family and CF team, what can lead to truncated communication, understanding and evaluating of the treatment process. Nurses must understand the children perspective about the disease and how their understanding influences their evaluation about the treatment and defines the search for cure. With this we will be able to plan a health care treatment based on the family, children and CF team expectations, with an unified goal that priories the quality of life instead of the disease control.
- Published
- 2013
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6. A remark on solving large systems of equations in function spaces
- Author
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I. Bremer and Klaus R. Schneider
- Subjects
Algebra ,Function space ,Applied Mathematics ,System of linear equations ,Mathematics - Published
- 1990
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7. Dietary amino acids fed in free form and as protein components do not differently affect postprandial plasma insulin, glucagon, growth hormone and corticosterone responses in rats
- Author
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E. M. E. Van Straten, R.E. Koopmanschap, J. A. Nolles, M.W.A. Verstegen, V.V.A.M. Schreurs, and B. I. Bremer
- Subjects
Male ,Animal Nutrition ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Weight Gain ,nitrogen ,Random Allocation ,Food Animals ,Casein ,Insulin ,Amino Acids ,humans ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Postprandial Period ,Diervoeding ,Amino acid ,Postprandial ,Human and Animal Physiology ,Area Under Curve ,Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,leucine ,Leucine ,retention ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biology ,Glucagon ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,skeletal-muscle ,Rats, Wistar ,Catabolism ,neonatal pigs ,Metabolism ,Rats ,mixtures ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,carbohydrate ,Growth Hormone ,WIAS ,ingestion ,Fysiologie van Mens en Dier ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Corticosterone ,Energy Metabolism ,metabolism - Abstract
This study examined, whether the postprandial fate of dietary amino acids from different amino acid sources is regulated by the responses of insulin, glucagon, corticosterone and growth hormone (GH). Male Wistar rats were cannulated in the vena jugularis and assigned to dietary groups. The diets contained 21% casein or the same amino acids in free form. In the free amino acid diets, methionine level was varied between the groups. The feed was supplied in two distinct meals. In previous experiments it was established that oxidative amino acid losses of the free amino acid diets and protein diets were different. After 3 weeks on those diets, it appeared that the differences in postprandial oxidative losses had been diminished. GH was measured every 12 min, from 144 min before the start of the experimental meal over the following 144 min. Insulin and corticosterone were measured six times from the start of the meal until 270 min after the meal. No differences have been observed between the hormonal responses to both meals at day 5 and at day 26. In conclusion, it has been found that the differences in the oxidative losses between protein and free amino acid meals are not mediated by the combined action of the insulin, glucagon, corticosterone and GH. Postprandial catabolism of amino acids is most probably regulated by substrate induction.
- Published
- 2006
8. Newly constructed stable reporter cell lines for mechanistic studies on electrophile-responsive element-mediated gene expression reveal a role for flavonoid planarity
- Author
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Jac M.M.J.G. Aarts, Yee Y. Lee-Hilz, Hester van der Woude, Ellen Kampman, Ivonne M.C.M. Rietjens, Martijn Vermeulen, Anne-Marie J. F. Boerboom, Birgit I. Bremer, Peter J. van Bladeren, and TNO Kwaliteit van Leven
- Subjects
Nutrition and Disease ,Mouse ,Transcription, Genetic ,Glutathione transferase ,Response element ,Screening test ,antioxidant activity ,Drug structure ,Gene Expression ,Aetiology, screening and detection [ONCOL 5] ,Toxicology ,Chemoprophylaxis ,Biochemistry ,Gene ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Transient transfection ,Genes, Reporter ,Voeding en Ziekte ,Gene expression ,Determinants in Health and Disease [EBP 1] ,Gene activation ,Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) dehydrogenase (quinone) ,Luteolin ,Luciferases ,Regulation of gene expression ,protein-kinase-c ,Structure activity relation ,Genetic transcription ,Myricetin ,Transcription initiation ,Validation study ,Molecular interaction ,Hepa-1c1c7 cells ,inducible expression ,Reporter gene ,Tandem repeat ,consensus sequence ,Enzyme Induction ,transcription factor nrf2 ,Quercetin ,Benzyl isothiocyanate ,Animal cell ,Plasmids ,Tert butylhydroquinone ,Biochemie ,Gene induction ,Biology ,chemopreventive agents ,Cell Line ,Molecular epidemiology [NCEBP 1] ,nad(p)h-quinone oxidoreductase ,Kaempferol ,Cancer screening ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Drug potency ,Antioxidant activity ,Translational research [ONCOL 3] ,Interventional oncology [UMCN 1.5] ,Cancer cell culture ,Animals ,Humans ,Luciferase ,Enhancer ,Molecular Biology ,Toxicologie ,VLAG ,DNA Primers ,Pharmacology ,Flavonoids ,Electrophile-responsive element (EpRE) ,Taxifolin ,Hereditary cancer and cancer-related syndromes [ONCOL 1] ,Base Sequence ,subunit gene ,Stable luciferase reporter cell lines ,colorectal-cancer ,Fisetin ,Nonhuman ,Molecular biology ,chemistry ,Human cell ,detoxify carcinogens ,Stereospecificity ,Electrophile responsive element mediated gene ,Controlled study - Abstract
The electrophile-responsive element (EpRE) is a transcriptional enhancer involved in cancer-chemoprotective gene expression modulation by certain food components. Two stably transfected luciferase reporter cell lines were developed, EpRE(hNQO1)-LUX and EpRE(mGST-Ya)-LUX, based on EpRE sequences from the human NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (hNQO1) and the mouse glutathione-S-transferase Ya (mGST-Ya) gene, containing one and two tandem EpRE core sequences, respectively. The standard inducer tert-butylhydroquinone (tBHQ), the electrophile benzyl isothiocyanate (BITC), and the antioxidant flavonoid quercetin were found to induce luciferase expression, thereby validating these newly developed reporter cell lines. For tBHQ and BITC, but not for quercetin, higher maximum luciferase induction was found under control of the mGST-Ya EpRE as compared to the hNQO1 EpRE, pointing at different induction mechanisms. Furthermore, we investigated the structure-activity relationship for induction of luciferase expression by flavonoids in EpRE(mGST-Ya)-LUX cells, and also the relation between luciferase induction and flavonoid antioxidant potency. Five different flavonoids with a planar molecular structure were found to induce various levels of luciferase activity, whereas taxifolin, a non-planar flavonoid, did not induce luciferase activity. This suggests that a stereospecific molecular interaction may be important for EpRE-mediated gene activation, possibly with Keap1, a regulator of EpRE-controlled transcription, or with another effector or receptor protein. No consistent relation between luciferase induction level and flavonoid antioxidant potential was observed. Altogether, these results point to differences in induction mechanism between the various chemoprotective compounds tested. The newly developed stably transfected reporter cell lines provide a validated tool for future screening and mechanistic studies of EpRE-mediated gene transcription. © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Chemicals/CAS: benzyl isothiocyanate, 622-78-6; fisetin, 528-48-3; glutathione transferase, 50812-37-8; kaempferol, 520-18-3; luteolin, 491-70-3; myricetin, 529-44-2; quercetin, 117-39-5; reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) dehydrogenase (quinone), 9032-20-6; taxifolin, 480-18-2; tert butylhydroquinone, 1948-33-0; DNA Primers; Flavonoids; Luciferases, EC 1.13.12.
- Published
- 2006
9. Projektionsverfahren zur Simulation von Copolymerisationsprozessen
- Author
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R. Antonova and I. Bremer
- Subjects
Method of mean weighted residuals ,Discrete mathematics ,Chain length ,Single species ,Ordinary differential equation ,Space dimension ,Ode solver ,Applied mathematics ,Algebraic number ,Galerkin method ,Mathematics - Abstract
Modelling copolymerization reactions by using formal kinetics between species of different chain length leads to a system of some algebraic and infinitly many ordinary differential equations. We will treat mass distributions over chain length as basic objects instead of considering single species. This will reduce the number of objects to simulate. In case of two and more monomers we get distributions in higher space dimension. We use statistical moments of such distributions or their time-derivative's for the direct approximation or to obtain weight functions for simulation with discrete weighted residual methods such as Galerkin's method. We give a short overview on how to generate program-code with the appropriate right hand side for standard DAE or ODE solver.
- Published
- 1997
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- View/download PDF
10. Long-term anorectal function after Duhamel operation for Hirschsprung's disease
- Author
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S. Ekkelkamp, I. Bremer, Hugo A. Heij, A. Vos, X. de Vries, and Other departments
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Constipation ,Time Factors ,Manometry ,Anal Canal ,Disease ,Postoperative Complications ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Hirschsprung Disease ,Stage (cooking) ,Child ,Hirschsprung's disease ,Total colonic aganglionosis ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Anorectal manometry ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Anorectal function ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Fecal Incontinence ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Long-term anorectal function was assessed in children operated on using Duhamel's technique for Hirschsprung's disease. The files of 75 patients (16 girls and 59 boys) operated on between 1977 and 1991 were reviewed. Questionnaires were analysed on 63 (12 girls and 51 boys) over 2 years of age. The median age at completing the questionnaire was 6.6 years. Forty-one of these 63 patients had aganglionosis of the rectosigmoid, 15 of a long colonic segment, and 7 of the total colon. Of 14 children age 4 or less, 6 had severe constipation, whereas 8 had regular spontaneous defaecation. Ten of the 49 over 4 years of age were continent without constipation, 22 had soiling and/or constipation, and 17 were incontinent, one of whom had a permanent colostomy. There was no correlation between age or sex and anorectal function. Anorectal function in children with long segment was not worse than in those with rectosigmoid aganglionosis, but only 1 of 7 with total colonic aganglionosis was continent. Because many adapt themselves to the handicap, symptoms are often underreported. A detailed questionnaire appears to be a reliable tool for elucidating the real situation. A systematic follow-up of patients with Hirschsprung's disease is proposed to anticipate the complications and to institute proper measures at an early stage.
- Published
- 1995
11. Is antibiotic prophylaxis expendable in parotid gland surgery? A retrospective analysis of surgical site infection rates.
- Author
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Hohenberger R, Bremer I, Brinster R, Plinkert PK, and Federspil PA
- Subjects
- Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Operative Time, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Antibiotic Prophylaxis, Parotid Diseases surgery, Surgical Wound Infection epidemiology, Surgical Wound Infection prevention & control
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the rate of surgical site infection (SSI) and associated risk factors after parotid gland surgery including the impact of antibiotic prophylaxis., Design: Retrospective single-centre clinical study., Setting: Tertiary referral centre for head and neck surgery., Participants: Seven hundred and fifty four patients who underwent parotid gland surgery at the University Hospital Heidelberg, Germany, between 2007 and 2014 were enrolled in this study. Data on patient age, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification system, smoking status, diabetes mellitus, operation time, and antibiotic prophylaxis were collected. Additionally, the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) risk index was calculated. Association of these factors with SSI was evaluated in univariate analyses and a multivariate logistic regression model., Main Outcome Measures: Rate of SSI., Results: Twenty four patients (3.2%) had an SSI according to the NHSN definition. In univariate analyses, only smokers (P = .048) and male patients (P = .01) had a significantly higher rate of SSI. Since the majority of smokers were men (62.3%), the effect of male gender, smoking, together with the NHSN risk index was further investigated as predictors of SSI within a logistic regression model. All three predictors showed a significant effect on SSI., Conclusions: Parotid gland surgery has a low rate of SSI. In our cohort, male gender, smoking and high NHSN risk index scores were significantly associated with SSI, whereas antibiotic prophylaxis had no protective effect., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
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12. A 42-Year-Old Male with Diabetes Insipidus.
- Author
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Bremer Pais I, Bernreuther C, Minnemann T, Saeger W, Hagel C, Iking-Konert C, Aberle J, and Flitsch J
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms complications, Germinoma complications, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Brain pathology, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Diabetes Insipidus complications, Germinoma diagnostic imaging
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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13. Suture button reconstruction of the central band of the interosseous membrane in Essex-Lopresti lesions: a comparative biomechanical investigation.
- Author
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Hackl M, Andermahr J, Staat M, Bremer I, Borggrefe J, Prescher A, Müller LP, and Wegmann K
- Subjects
- Aged, 80 and over, Cadaver, Female, Forearm, Humans, Joint Dislocations complications, Joint Instability etiology, Male, Radius Fractures complications, Range of Motion, Articular physiology, Weight-Bearing physiology, Wrist Injuries complications, Internal Fixators, Joint Instability physiopathology, Joint Instability surgery, Sutures
- Abstract
Surgical reconstruction of the interosseous membrane may restore longitudinal forearm stability in Essex-Lopresti lesions. This study aimed to compare the longitudinal stability of the intact forearm with a single-bundle and a double-bundle reconstruction of the central band of the interosseous membrane using digital image correlation with a three-dimensional camera system. Single and cyclic axial loading of eight fresh-frozen forearm specimens was carried out in the intact state, after creation of an Essex-Lopresti lesion, after a single-bundle and after a double-bundle reconstruction of the central band using a TightRope
® (Arthrex GmbH, Munich, Germany) construct. Instability significantly increased after creation of an Essex-Lopresti lesion. The stability of intact specimens was similar to both reconstruction techniques. The results of this study suggest that TightRope® reconstruction of the central band restores longitudinal forearm stability. However, the single-bundle technique may be less reliable than double-bundle reconstruction., Level of Evidence: Basic Science Study.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Nanoporous silica nanoparticles as biomaterials: evaluation of different strategies for the functionalization with polysialic acid by step-by-step cytocompatibility testing.
- Author
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Williams S, Neumann A, Bremer I, Su Y, Dräger G, Kasper C, and Behrens P
- Subjects
- Click Chemistry, Hep G2 Cells, Humans, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Powder Diffraction, Spectrophotometry, Atomic, Spectrophotometry, Infrared, Biocompatible Materials, Nanoparticles, Nanopores, Sialic Acids chemistry, Silicon Dioxide chemistry
- Abstract
Nanoporous silica materials have become a prominent novel class of biomaterials which are typically applied as nanoparticles or thin films. Their large surface area combined with the rich surface chemistry of amorphous silica affords the possibility to equip this material with variable functionalities, also with several different ones on the same particle or coating. Although many studies have shown that nanoporous silica is apparently non-toxic and basically biocompatible, any surface modification may change the surface properties considerably and, therefore, the modified materials should be checked for their biocompatibility at every step. Here we report on different silane-based functionalization strategies, firstly a conventional succinic anhydride-based linker system and, secondly, copper-catalyzed click chemistry, to bind polysialic acid, a polysaccharide important in neurogenesis, onto nanoporous silica nanoparticles (NPSNPs) of MCM-41 type. At each of the different modification steps, the materials are characterized by cell culture experiments. The results show that polysialic acid can be immobilized on the surface of NPSNPs by using different strategies. The cell culture experiments show that the kind of surface immobilization has a strong influence on the toxicity of the material versus the cells. Whereas most modifications appear inoffensive, NPSNPs modified by click reactions are toxic, probably due to residues of the Cu catalyst used in these reactions.
- Published
- 2015
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15. Long-term anorectal function after Duhamel operation for Hirschsprung's disease.
- Author
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Heij HA, de Vries X, Bremer I, Ekkelkamp S, and Vos A
- Subjects
- Child, Constipation epidemiology, Fecal Incontinence epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hirschsprung Disease epidemiology, Hirschsprung Disease physiopathology, Humans, Male, Manometry, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Anal Canal physiopathology, Constipation etiology, Fecal Incontinence etiology, Hirschsprung Disease surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology
- Abstract
Long-term anorectal function was assessed in children operated on using Duhamel's technique for Hirschsprung's disease. The files of 75 patients (16 girls and 59 boys) operated on between 1977 and 1991 were reviewed. Questionnaires were analysed on 63 (12 girls and 51 boys) over 2 years of age. The median age at completing the questionnaire was 6.6 years. Forty-one of these 63 patients had aganglionosis of the rectosigmoid, 15 of a long colonic segment, and 7 of the total colon. Of 14 children age 4 or less, 6 had severe constipation, whereas 8 had regular spontaneous defaecation. Ten of the 49 over 4 years of age were continent without constipation, 22 had soiling and/or constipation, and 17 were incontinent, one of whom had a permanent colostomy. There was no correlation between age or sex and anorectal function. Anorectal function in children with long segment was not worse than in those with rectosigmoid aganglionosis, but only 1 of 7 with total colonic aganglionosis was continent. Because many adapt themselves to the handicap, symptoms are often underreported. A detailed questionnaire appears to be a reliable tool for elucidating the real situation. A systematic follow-up of patients with Hirschsprung's disease is proposed to anticipate the complications and to institute proper measures at an early stage.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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