The aim of this study was to assess the value of Hughes' pathogenic classification in the prognosis and management of perianal Crohn's disease (CD).
This classification differentiates between purely ...inflammatory lesions and their mechanical or septic complications, and defines the presence of ulceration (U), fistula (F) and stricture (S), which are assigned a score of 0, 1 or 2 according to the severity and associated conditions, proximal intestinal involvement and disease activity (A, P and D). Of a series of 96 patients with CD, 12 underwent 16 procedures involving anesthesia to treat symptomatic anal lesions. Patients presenting with severe pain were explored and treated by surgical drainage or, in cases in which there was no demonstrable sepsis, by gentle dilation or infiltration with steroids. For superficial, non-specific fistulas, conventional fistulotomy was performed, and long-term seton drainage was implanted for complex fistulas. Strictures were treated by gentle dilation. Uncontrolled sepsis or proctocolitis was managed by proximal stoma creation or proctocolectomy.
The association of cavitating ulcers (U2) and contiguous active rectal involvement (P1) was a contraindication for rectal preservation, making proctectomy or stoma creation the most feasible therapeutic option. The etiology of most, but not all, complex fistulas (F2) was the progressive cavitation of U2, whilst F1 was either of cryptoglandular origin or the result of epithelialized fissures (U1). The treatment was also adjusted to this association, and it was confirmed that most of the severe lesions (F2) and S2) were secondary to U2.
Hughes' pathogenic classification: 1) makes it possible to set up an easily stored registry of anal and perianal Crohn's disease; 2) identifies predefined lesions, allowing the individualization of therapeutic procedures and the comparison of results, and 3) provides prognostic information.
A study was made of the histologic changes in the mucosa of the ileoanal reservoirs of 10 patients who 2 years earlier had undergone ileoanal anastomosis with a J reservoir for ulcerative colitis ...(CU). In biopsies of the reservoirs were evaluated: 1) basic morphologic changes; 2) morphometric differences with respect to normal ileal mucosa; 3) the immunohistochemical pattern (IHQ) (IgA, IgG, IgM and CEA) of the reservoir mucosa as compared to normal ileum, active ulcerative colitis. Crohn's disease and celiaca; 4) the possible existence of atypias or dysplasias of the reservoir mucosa; and 5) the number of argentaffin cells per field. The basic morphologic alteration consisted of colonic metaplasia. Reservoir biopsies exhibited partial (8 cases) or subtotal atrophy (2 cases) of the mucosa. With respect to the normal ileum there was a decrease in villi height (p less than 0.05), an increase in crypt depth (p less than 0.05) and a higher index of mucosal regeneration, with a larger number of cells and mitoses per crypt (p less than 0.05). Fifty percent of the reservoirs presented a chronic inflammatory pattern with an acute component in 30% of them. The immunohistochemical pattern of the reservoirs not inflamed was similar to that of normal ileum (IgA much greater than IgM greater than IgG) and that of the inflamed reservoirs was similar to that of intestinal inflammatory disease (marked increase in the IgG. CEA (similar to what?) an alteration of local immune homeostasis could have of the genesis of pictures of "pouchitis". No alarming signs of atypia or dysplasia were found, nor changes in the population of argentaffin cells.
Cox regression analysis was used in the study of 151 cases of surgically treated colorrectal carcinoma. A "curative" resection was performed in all of them. Clinical data from medical records, ...histology, biochemical determinations, and intraoperative findings were assessed. Four of the studied variables were significantly related to tumor recurrence: Dukes stage, tumor spread, histological variety and preoperative CEA level. Age, sex, tumor location, surgical technique, lymphocytes in the peripheral blood, preoperative levels of acute phase reactants and hepatic enzymes did not provide information about the final outcome of these patients. An index of prognosis was statistically obtained in order to identify a high risk of recurrence group of patients, who may benefit from adjuvant therapy.
The purpose of this study was to assess whether the understaging of rectal tumors seen after preoperative radiotherapy is due to the biological effect of the irradiation or reflect the difficulties ...of the pathologists in identifying lymph nodes from radiated specimens. To study this question a retrospective non randomized study was undertaken including 31 patients with rectal cancer and oncological resection, 16 after preoperative administration of 36 Gy and 15 without radiotherapy. Metastatic lymph nodes were found in 37% of patients of the radiated group and in 58% of no irradiated group, being de difference between them of 16% with a confidence interval from -15% to 40%. A mean of 13 and 18 lymph nodes were identified in the radiated and non radiated group respectively, being the difference between means of 5 with a confidence interval from -0.6 to 10. A 80% and 57% of the pathological reports in no radiated and radiated group respectively accomplished the criteria of reliability (> 13 lymph modes isolated), being the difference between proportions of 27% with a confidence interval from -3% to 57%. Based on the above stated results no conclusive answer can be addressed to the proposed question; both effects could participate in the downstaging. More studies including more patients are needed to give a reliable answer to the proposed question.
Skin care in intestinal fistula and stoma Enríquez-Navascués, J M; Devesa, M; Morales, V ...
Revista espanola de las enfermedades del aparato digestivo
72, Številka:
3
Journal Article