Experience of 49 longitudinal intestinal lengthening procedures for short bowel syndrome

Stuart Hosie, S. Loff, H. Wirth, H. J. Rapp, C. Von Buch, K. L. Waag

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

34 Scopus citations

Abstract

Patients, Methods and Results: Forty-nine patients with a mean age of 25 months underwent a longitudinal intestinal lengthening procedure for short bowel syndrome (SBS) in our institution. Indications for the operation were dependence on parenteral nutrition in spite of adequate conservative management. The small bowel was lengthened from a mean of 27 cm to a mean of 51 cm. There was no intraoperative mortality. The following early complications occurred in our early series: ischemia of a short bowel segment of 2cm, requiring resection in two patients, insufficiency of the longitudinal anastomosis in two patients and an intra-abdominal abscess in one. Four of 9 non-survivors died of liver failure and 3 of sepsis. Follow-up showed that 19 patients were weaned from parenteral nutrition after a mean of 9.1 months. Long-term complications encountered were dismotility with malabsorption due to bacterial overgrowth caused by progressive dilatation of the bowel, d-lactic acidosis, cholelithiasis and urolithiasis. Conclusions: A longitudinal intestinal lengthening procedure is an effective and safe surgical approach for SBS, provided it is perfomed in time, the patient's preoperative condition is optimized and technical surgical details are taken into account.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)171-175
Number of pages5
JournalEuropean Journal of Pediatric Surgery
Volume16
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2006
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bowel lengthening
  • Short bowel syndrome
  • Surgical treatment

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