View clinical trials related to Anastomotic Leak.
Filter by:Our aim is to analyze C-Reactive Protein trends during the post-operative course in Crohn's Disease patients having undergone ileocolic resection and primary anastomosis, for the purpose of anastomotic leak early diagnosis.
A randomised feasibility study into the use of endoscopic visualisation of rectal anastomosis vs. current practice and the effect on anastomotic leak rates in patients undergoing rectal surgery for bowel cancer in a tertiary referral centre
This protocol describes using an MRI-Enema technique to assess the integrity of colorectal anastomoses when compared to fluoroscopic water soluble contrast enema, and provides information the participant recruitment process, participant experience and study management.
Anastomotic leakage is serious morbidity that can develop in patients operated on for colorectal cancer and can reach potentially life-threatening dimensions. Many international studies have been conducted to reduce and eliminate this postoperative complication that may have a mortal course. In these studies, preoperative, perioperative and postoperative factors of the patient, operation techniques, structure of the material used in the operation and multiple factors belonging to the surgeon were held responsible. Intraabdominal sepsis secondary to late anastomotic leakage and subsequent multiorgan failure can cost the patient's life. Anastomotic leaks that develop in patients who have been operated for colorectal cancer; In order to detect patients' postoperative clinical findings, laboratory examinations, imaging tests, and to eliminate them before intraabdominal sepsis develops, studies including many different laboratory and imaging methods have been carried out. Although previous studies have shown that there are many laboratory examinations and imaging methods that can predict anastomotic leaks early, they have many advantages over each other in terms of efficiency, sensitivity, specificity, and cost. The investigators aimed to investigate the effectiveness of C reactive protein and blood sodium value, as well as their superiority, among the tests that can predict postoperative anastomotic leakage, especially in patients who have undergone a single anastomosis following resection for non-metastatic colorectal cancer.
Introduction: Colorectal surgery (CRS) is associated with high morbidity rates, being anastomotic leakage (AL) one of the most serious complications with an incidence as high as 15%, accounting for up to a third of mortality in these procedures. The identification of pre-clinical markers may allow an early diagnosis and a timely intervention. Objective: To compare the performance of neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) vs C-reactive protein (CRP) as early predictors of AL in CRS. Methodology: A retrospectively analyzed consecutive patients who underwent a colorectal surgery with anastomosis from June 2015 to April 2019. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to find the cutoff points with the best diagnostic performance of AL.
Cytoreductive surgery is currently the main treatment for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AEOC), and the complete disease removal (RT=0) or the achievement of an optimal residual disease (RT < 1 cm) remain the factors with the greatest prognostic impact, both in primary debulking surgery (PDS) and interval debulking surgery (IDS). To achieve the no residual disease (RT=0), several surgical manoeuvres are often needed both at the upper and lower abdomen, including intestinal resections. Recto-sigmoid resection is certainly the most frequent of intestinal resections, and it is also the one with the highest risk of complication. Albeit rare, anastomosis leakage (AL) is a life-threating condition and therefore it is the most feared of intestinal complications. The aim of this large single-center retrospective study was to assess the AL rate in patients subjected to colorectal resection and anastomosis during primary surgery (PDS or IDS) for advanced ovarian cancer, in a third referral centre for gynecologic oncology with ESGO certification. In addition, we evaluated several possible pre/intra and post-operative risk factors for AL in order to identify, at an early stage, the population at greatest risk, and attempt to reduce the morbidity and mortality of this severe post-operative complication
The complication rate in colorectal surgery is high and shows a large variance depending on the patient and the treating surgeon. The primary aim of the presented study is to evaluate the introduction of a colorectal bundle to reduce the complication rate in left sided colorectal resections. The colorectal bundle is a catalog of measures consisting of several items These are for example preoperative risk stratification, antibiotic and mechanical bowel preparation and preoperative showering. The primary endpoint will be the complication rate measured as the comprehensive clinical index (CCI) within 30 days. Investigators will include patients that undergo elective or emergency left sided colorectal surgery.
This is a retrospective cohort study of all consecutive patients who underwent colon or rectal resection, between the years 2012-2017 at Rabin Medical Center, a tertiary referral center in Israel. Data were obtained from patients' electronic medical files. The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) of Rabin Medical Center (RMC). The study met the guidelines outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki. Due to the minimal risk nature of this study, the need for informed consent was waived by the IRB. Patient population: All patients aged 70 years and above who underwent large bowel resection were included in the analysis. Inclusion criteria were: age ≥70; all patients undergoing any colonic or rectal resection for benign or malignant etiologies in an open or minimally-invasive approach Exclusion criteria were: age<70; colon resection without anastomoses; re-operations during the same admission . Data retrieved included demographic data (age, gender, Charlson comorbidity score, place of residency, functional capacity, BMI), surgical data (indication for surgery, elective vs urgent surgery, surgical approach, length of surgery, peri-operative morbidity and mortality.All surgeries were performed by at least one senior surgeon. The surgical approach (laparoscopic or laparotomy) was at the senior surgeon's discretion and deemed most appropriate for the patient's problem, physiological status and underlying illnesses. The extent of the resection was according to oncological guidelines when relevant Endpoints: Primary endpoint was the occurrence of postoperative anastomotic leak. Secondary end-point was postoperative mortality Statistical Analysis The statistical analysis for this paper was generated using SAS Software. Continuous variables were presented by Mean±Std, Categorical variables were presented by (N, %). T-Test was used to compare the value of continuous variables between study groups and Fisher's exact test (for two groups) or Chi-square (for more than two groups) were used to compare the value of categorical variables between study groups. Two-sided p values less than .05 were considered statistically significant
We investigate whether the intravenously administered human albumin is beneficial to prevent anastomotic leakage after gastric cancer surgery.
The use of regenerative medicine in colorectal surgery constitutes an entirely new therapeutic principle. The aim of this new therapeutic approach is to reduce the anastomotic leak rate and minimise morbidity and mortality. The literature identifies the leak rate for colorectal operations as 3-39%.