Endoscopic closure of colon perforation compared to surgery in a porcine model: a randomized controlled trial (with videos).

Standard

Endoscopic closure of colon perforation compared to surgery in a porcine model: a randomized controlled trial (with videos). / Raju, Gottumukkala S; Fritscher Ravens, Annette; Rothstein, Richard I; Swain, Paul; Gelrud, Andres; Ahmed, Ijaz; Gomez, Guillermo; Winny, Markus; Sonnanstine, Thomas; Bergström, Maria; Park, Per-Ola.

in: GASTROINTEST ENDOSC, Jahrgang 68, Nr. 2, 2, 2008, S. 324-332.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Raju, GS, Fritscher Ravens, A, Rothstein, RI, Swain, P, Gelrud, A, Ahmed, I, Gomez, G, Winny, M, Sonnanstine, T, Bergström, M & Park, P-O 2008, 'Endoscopic closure of colon perforation compared to surgery in a porcine model: a randomized controlled trial (with videos).', GASTROINTEST ENDOSC, Jg. 68, Nr. 2, 2, S. 324-332. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18561931?dopt=Citation>

APA

Raju, G. S., Fritscher Ravens, A., Rothstein, R. I., Swain, P., Gelrud, A., Ahmed, I., Gomez, G., Winny, M., Sonnanstine, T., Bergström, M., & Park, P-O. (2008). Endoscopic closure of colon perforation compared to surgery in a porcine model: a randomized controlled trial (with videos). GASTROINTEST ENDOSC, 68(2), 324-332. [2]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18561931?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Raju GS, Fritscher Ravens A, Rothstein RI, Swain P, Gelrud A, Ahmed I et al. Endoscopic closure of colon perforation compared to surgery in a porcine model: a randomized controlled trial (with videos). GASTROINTEST ENDOSC. 2008;68(2):324-332. 2.

Bibtex

@article{54c1eda0d424422eba1d7a7fcaf12c56,
title = "Endoscopic closure of colon perforation compared to surgery in a porcine model: a randomized controlled trial (with videos).",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Endoscopic closure of inadvertent or intentional colon perforations might be valuable if comparable to surgical closure. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to compare endoscopic closure of a 4-cm colon perforation in a porcine model with surgical closure in a multicenter study. SETTING: University hospitals in the United States and Europe. DESIGN AND INTERVENTIONS: After creating a 4-cm linear colon perforation, the animals were randomized to either endoscopic or surgical closure. The total procedure time from the beginning of perforation to the completion of procedure was measured. The animals were euthanized after 2 weeks to evaluate healing, unless there was a complication. RESULTS: Fifty-four animals were randomized to either surgical or endoscopic closure of colon perforation. Eight animals developed complications, and 7 of these were euthanized before 2 weeks. Twenty-three animals in each group survived for 2 weeks. Surgical closure of the perforation was successful in all animals in that group, and endoscopic closure was successful in 25 of the 27 animals. The median procedure time was shorter in the surgery group compared to the endoscopy group (35 vs 44 minutes, P = .016). Peritonitis, local adhesions, and leak test results were comparable in both groups. Distant adhesions were less frequent in the endoscopic closure group (26.1% vs 56.5%, P = .03). Five of the 186 T-tags (2.7%) were noted in the adjacent viscera. LIMITATION: This porcine study does not mimic clean colon perforation in humans; it mimics dirty colon perforation in humans. CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopic closure of a 4-cm colon perforation was comparable to surgery, and this technique can be potentially used for closure of intentional or inadvertent colon perforations.",
author = "Raju, {Gottumukkala S} and {Fritscher Ravens}, Annette and Rothstein, {Richard I} and Paul Swain and Andres Gelrud and Ijaz Ahmed and Guillermo Gomez and Markus Winny and Thomas Sonnanstine and Maria Bergstr{\"o}m and Per-Ola Park",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "68",
pages = "324--332",
journal = "GASTROINTEST ENDOSC",
issn = "0016-5107",
publisher = "Mosby Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Endoscopic closure of colon perforation compared to surgery in a porcine model: a randomized controlled trial (with videos).

AU - Raju, Gottumukkala S

AU - Fritscher Ravens, Annette

AU - Rothstein, Richard I

AU - Swain, Paul

AU - Gelrud, Andres

AU - Ahmed, Ijaz

AU - Gomez, Guillermo

AU - Winny, Markus

AU - Sonnanstine, Thomas

AU - Bergström, Maria

AU - Park, Per-Ola

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - BACKGROUND: Endoscopic closure of inadvertent or intentional colon perforations might be valuable if comparable to surgical closure. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to compare endoscopic closure of a 4-cm colon perforation in a porcine model with surgical closure in a multicenter study. SETTING: University hospitals in the United States and Europe. DESIGN AND INTERVENTIONS: After creating a 4-cm linear colon perforation, the animals were randomized to either endoscopic or surgical closure. The total procedure time from the beginning of perforation to the completion of procedure was measured. The animals were euthanized after 2 weeks to evaluate healing, unless there was a complication. RESULTS: Fifty-four animals were randomized to either surgical or endoscopic closure of colon perforation. Eight animals developed complications, and 7 of these were euthanized before 2 weeks. Twenty-three animals in each group survived for 2 weeks. Surgical closure of the perforation was successful in all animals in that group, and endoscopic closure was successful in 25 of the 27 animals. The median procedure time was shorter in the surgery group compared to the endoscopy group (35 vs 44 minutes, P = .016). Peritonitis, local adhesions, and leak test results were comparable in both groups. Distant adhesions were less frequent in the endoscopic closure group (26.1% vs 56.5%, P = .03). Five of the 186 T-tags (2.7%) were noted in the adjacent viscera. LIMITATION: This porcine study does not mimic clean colon perforation in humans; it mimics dirty colon perforation in humans. CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopic closure of a 4-cm colon perforation was comparable to surgery, and this technique can be potentially used for closure of intentional or inadvertent colon perforations.

AB - BACKGROUND: Endoscopic closure of inadvertent or intentional colon perforations might be valuable if comparable to surgical closure. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to compare endoscopic closure of a 4-cm colon perforation in a porcine model with surgical closure in a multicenter study. SETTING: University hospitals in the United States and Europe. DESIGN AND INTERVENTIONS: After creating a 4-cm linear colon perforation, the animals were randomized to either endoscopic or surgical closure. The total procedure time from the beginning of perforation to the completion of procedure was measured. The animals were euthanized after 2 weeks to evaluate healing, unless there was a complication. RESULTS: Fifty-four animals were randomized to either surgical or endoscopic closure of colon perforation. Eight animals developed complications, and 7 of these were euthanized before 2 weeks. Twenty-three animals in each group survived for 2 weeks. Surgical closure of the perforation was successful in all animals in that group, and endoscopic closure was successful in 25 of the 27 animals. The median procedure time was shorter in the surgery group compared to the endoscopy group (35 vs 44 minutes, P = .016). Peritonitis, local adhesions, and leak test results were comparable in both groups. Distant adhesions were less frequent in the endoscopic closure group (26.1% vs 56.5%, P = .03). Five of the 186 T-tags (2.7%) were noted in the adjacent viscera. LIMITATION: This porcine study does not mimic clean colon perforation in humans; it mimics dirty colon perforation in humans. CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopic closure of a 4-cm colon perforation was comparable to surgery, and this technique can be potentially used for closure of intentional or inadvertent colon perforations.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 68

SP - 324

EP - 332

JO - GASTROINTEST ENDOSC

JF - GASTROINTEST ENDOSC

SN - 0016-5107

IS - 2

M1 - 2

ER -