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. 1981 Dec;194(6):754-60.
doi: 10.1097/00000658-198112000-00016.

Proximal recurrence and the fate of the rectum following excisional surgery for Crohn's disease of the large bowel

Proximal recurrence and the fate of the rectum following excisional surgery for Crohn's disease of the large bowel

M R Lock et al. Ann Surg. 1981 Dec.

Abstract

One-hundred-twenty-seven patients with Crohn's disease of the large bowel underwent excisional surgery with the establishment of an ileostomy at the Cleveland Clinic between 1955 and 1973; the distribution of disease at this initial resection could be accurately determined. A mean follow-up period of 11 1/2 years has shown that the overall incidence of recurrence requiring resection was 27% and the cumulative risk of recurrence determined by actuarial methods was 44% (+/- 10.6%) at 19 years. Initial involvement of the terminal ileum in addition to the large bowel was associated with a significantly higher incidence of overall recurrence (p less than 0.05) and earlier postoperative recurrence (46% +/- 9% at 11 years), when compared with patients who had ileal sparing (23% +/- 5% at 11 years). This suggests that involvement of the terminal ileum in patients with Crohn's disease of the large bowel may be of prognostic importance. Of 101 patients who had a subtotal colectomy with rectal preservation, 58 subsequently underwent either rectal excision (46 patients), ileorectal anastomosis (six patients) or both of these operations (six patients); this high incidence of reoperation should not be confused with recurrence.

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