Affiliation:
1. Nightingale House, 90a Harley Street, London W1N 1AF, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients who present with large bowel obstruction often undergo emergency surgical intervention with its attendant risk of morbidity and death. A colostomy may be inevitable and this detracts from the patient's quality of life, especially when palliation is the only option.
Methods
This review examines the possibility of a more conservative approach using metallic stents to relieve colonic obstruction, either as the first stage of a curative surgical procedure or for palliation without surgery. The various stents available are examined.
Results
Case reports show that relief of obstruction can be achieved in over 80 per cent of patients, allowing subsequent elective surgery or achieving palliation for several months. Complications are rare but include colonic perforation, particularly when predilatation of the stricture has to be performed. Such complications are generally recognized early and patients can proceed to surgery and colostomy, as would previously have been conventional treatment; on occasion a small leak may be treated conservatively with success. The advent of newer endoprostheses which do not require active dilatation may improve the rate of successful deployment and lessen the risk of perforation.
Conclusion
The development of new endoprostheses has allowed their adaptation for use in the colon and, perhaps, the distal small bowel. The technology is evolving rapidly and warrants serious consideration in selected patients with large bowel obstruction before embarking on surgery. There is an urgent need for a controlled trial to establish whether such intervention for malignant strictures, potentially curable by surgery, leads to an increased risk of metastatic disease.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
29 articles.
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