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Title: Primary resection with and without anastomosis for perforation of acute diverticulitis. Author: Saccomani GE, Santi F, Gramegna A. Journal: Acta Chir Belg; 1993; 93(4):169-72. PubMed ID: 8237231. Abstract: The results of management of perforated large bowel diverticulitis were retrospectively studied over a 7-year period. 38 patients underwent operation, 20 for generalized peritonitis, 12 for local peritonitis, 5 for colovesical fistula and 1 for colovaginal fistula. The mean age of patients was 63 years (range 30-85 years). Depending on the symptoms, the spreading of the peritonitis and associated cardiovascular and pulmonary disease and diabetes mellitus, 4 types of operation were performed: primary left hemicolectomy and anastomosis with and without defunctioning colostomy, Hartmann procedure, suture and drainage with diverting colostomy. The overall mortality was 10.5%: resection and primary anastomosis entailed 3.8% mortality (1 case), while 3 deaths were observed in the 8 patients group having underwent an Hartmann procedure (37.5%). Drainage and/or diverting colostomy performed in 5 patients entailed no hospital mortality, but was followed by a 80% complication rate, requiring reoperation and several hospital admissions. The low mortality and morbidity rates obtained in the group having primary resection and anastomosis encourage wider application of this operation for perforated acute diverticulitis. Even the Hartmann procedure allows removal of the diseased colon but in a great proportion of cases reconstitution of continuity is not performed; nevertheless staged operation entailing major mortality and morbidity, expose these aged patients to remarkable hazard. Prerequisite of safe primary excision and anastomosis is vigorous intraperitoneal lavage and drainage, by the case associated to on table large bowel irrigation if concomitant obstruction is present.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]