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Necrotizing Enterocolitis: Late Surgical Results After Enterostomy Without Resection

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Publisher Thieme
Specialty Pediatrics
Date 1996 Apr 1
PMID 8740131
Citations 5
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Abstract

Between January 1985 and December 1992, 36 neonates were treated for necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). 13/36 were treated conservatively and 2 (18%) died. 23/36 required surgical treatment at birth and 6/23 (26%) died; 14, out of 17 surviving initial surgery, underwent reintervention to restore intestinal continuity, 3 to 26 months later. In these 14 infants the acute necrotizing process involved the whole colon and ileum in 3 cases, the whole colon in 5, part of the colon in 3, part of the colon and ileum in 2 and was confined to the ileum in 1. 11 cases were perforated. During their first laparotomy all 14 cases had a decompressive enterostomy without resection. 21 reoperations were later needed in these 14 patients: simple enterostomy closure was performed in only 1 case, while resection of delayed strictures was required in 13. 12 cases underwent partial colectomy, 3 of these had multiple segmental resections for skip lesions and only 1 child had a total colectomy. The only postoperative complication was one anastomotic leak. Two children had short-gut syndrome but later outgrew their need for parenteral nutrition. Our experience does not support the need of resecting the gangrenous bowel in the acute phase. A simple diverting enterostomy seems to be effective treatment. Delaying the intestinal resection up to the time of recanalisation allows spontaneous healing and results in the sparing of a significant length of bowel.

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