Department of Surgery, Leicester Royal Infirmary, Level 6 Balmoral Building, Leicester, LE1 5WW, UK.
J Gastrointest Surg. 2017 Sep;21(9):1385-1390. doi: 10.1007/s11605-017-3438-6. Epub 2017 Jun 23.
Feeding jejunostomy has increasingly become a standard adjunctive procedure during major esophago-gastric resections. They provide nutritional support during the post-operative period as required. However, significant early complications have been reported, most notably small bowel necrosis. Literature reports have been restricted to case reports or series. This study aims to determine the frequency of this complication in a cohort of patients undergoing esophago-gastric resection, and identify any difference in the risk of this complication between patients undergoing esophagectomy and gastrectomy.
Consecutive patients who had esophago-gastric resections for malignancy and who had a feeding jejunostomy placed were identified from a prospectively maintained database at Leicester Royal Infirmary during the years 2009-2015. Case notes were reviewed to extract information relating to demographics, presenting features and clinical outcome.
The study included 360 patients, 285 of which had esophagectomy and 75 had gastrectomy. There were no small bowel complications among esophagectomy patients (0%), while six patients who had total gastrectomy developed small bowel ischemia or necrosis (8%), p = 0.05, in spite of an identical feeding regimen. Every patient that developed the complication underwent surgery with five out six having resection of the infarcted segment and double-barrel stoma formation. A 6-8-week period of parenteral nutrition was required before stoma reversal. One patient had leucocytosis on the day of diagnosis. The other five patients showed no derangements in biochemical or clinical parameters in the preceding 48 h. Five of the six patients survived.
Small bowel necrosis and perforation is a life-threatening complication of feeding jejunostomy. In our cohort, it happened exclusively in total gastrectomy patients. Antecedent signs were lacking. The condition requires prompt attention with earlier use of CT scanning and a return to the operating room. The presence of pneumatosis intestinalis on CT scan should prompt surgical intervention that improves survival.
在大型食管胃切除术期间,经空肠饲管喂养越来越成为一种标准的辅助手术。术后根据需要提供营养支持。然而,据报道存在严重的早期并发症,最常见的是小肠坏死。文献报道仅限于病例报告或系列报告。本研究旨在确定在接受食管胃切除术的患者队列中这种并发症的发生频率,并确定接受食管切除术和胃切除术的患者之间发生这种并发症的风险是否存在差异。
从莱斯特皇家医院前瞻性维护的数据库中确定了 2009 年至 2015 年期间因恶性肿瘤接受食管胃切除术且放置饲管的连续患者。回顾病历以提取与人口统计学、临床表现和临床结局相关的信息。
本研究包括 360 例患者,其中 285 例行食管切除术,75 例行胃切除术。食管切除术患者无小肠并发症(0%),而 6 例行全胃切除术的患者发生小肠缺血或坏死(8%),p=0.05,尽管给予了相同的喂养方案。发生并发症的每位患者均接受手术治疗,其中 6 例患者切除梗死段并形成双套管造口。需要进行 6-8 周的肠外营养,然后再进行造口逆转。1 例患者在诊断当天出现白细胞增多。其余 5 例患者在之前的 48 小时内生化和临床参数无异常。6 例患者中有 5 例存活。
空肠饲管喂养引起的小肠坏死和穿孔是一种危及生命的并发症。在我们的队列中,它仅发生在全胃切除术患者中。无明显前兆。病情需要及时关注,更早地进行 CT 扫描,并返回手术室。CT 扫描上出现气腹征应提示进行手术干预,这可提高存活率。