J Korean Assoc Pediatr Surg.  1995 Jun;1(1):27-32. 10.13029/jkaps.1995.1.1.27.

Clinical Experience of Tapering Enteroplasty Using GIA Stapler in Jejunoileal Atresias

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, Catholic University Medical College, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

Jejunal and ileal atresias are the most common cause of congenital intestinal obstruction and accounts for about 1/3 of all cases of intestinal obstruction in newborns. Despite the relative frequency of this anomaly, its survival rate was less than 10% up to 1950, more recently the survival rate has risen rapidly to 90% with the introduction of modern surgical techniques and the use of total parenteral nutrition. In 1969 Thomas described a tapering jejunoplasty to manage the discrepancy in the size of the proximal dilated lumen & contracted distal lumen, and to preserve absorptive surface when the dilated jejunum involved a long length, and Grosfeld et al.(l979) facilitated this method by using GIA staplers. Author have also used GIA stapler to resect the antimesenteric portion of the dilated proximal bowel in 8 cases of jejunoileal atresias with good results. The following results were obtained; 1. There we 3 jejunal atresias & 5 ileal atresias, and male to female sex ratio was 5 : 3. 2. The type of atresia was as follows; type IIIa was 3 cases, type IIIb was 4 cases, type IIIb+IV was 1 case. 3. In non-complication cases(5 cases), the mean hospital day was 16 days, and oral feeding was feasible from 6.2 days after operation. 4. The complications(anastomotic leakage, pneumonia) were frequently occurred in type IIIb cases and in low birth weight cases(75%). 5. Mortality rate was 25% including DAMA(discharge against medical advice) discharge case.

Keyword

Tapering enteroplasty; Jejunoileal atresia

MeSH Terms

Female
Humans
Infant, Low Birth Weight
Infant, Newborn
Intestinal Atresia
Intestinal Obstruction
Jejunum
Male
Methods
Mortality
Parenteral Nutrition, Total
Sex Ratio
Survival Rate
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