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Perforative carcinoma of colon and rectum.
Ann Surg. 1974 Nov; 180(5):734-40.AnnS

Abstract

As further statistical evidence accumulates it is becoming evident that a major factor in the differing patient salvage between perforative and uncomplicated cancer of the colon and rectum is the element of infection. The absence of abdominal sepsis is undoubtedly responsible for the lessened morbidity and mortality found in the treatment of established fistulas. Surgical attention should therefore be directed first to the eradication of the primary source of infection, the perforated tumor. The safety with which an intestinal anastomosis may be made in the presence of edema and inflammation is a matter of mature judgement on the part of the operating surgeon. Postoperative suture line leakage should be avoidable. Extirpative surgery with or without anastomosis, coupled with the judicious drainage of the peritoneal cavity, antibiotic coverage, and blood volume support should continue to give improved results in the management of this distressing complication of cancer of the colon and rectum.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

4423043

Citation

Welch, J P., and G A. Donaldson. "Perforative Carcinoma of Colon and Rectum." Annals of Surgery, vol. 180, no. 5, 1974, pp. 734-40.
Welch JP, Donaldson GA. Perforative carcinoma of colon and rectum. Ann Surg. 1974;180(5):734-40.
Welch, J. P., & Donaldson, G. A. (1974). Perforative carcinoma of colon and rectum. Annals of Surgery, 180(5), 734-40.
Welch JP, Donaldson GA. Perforative Carcinoma of Colon and Rectum. Ann Surg. 1974;180(5):734-40. PubMed PMID: 4423043.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Perforative carcinoma of colon and rectum. AU - Welch,J P, AU - Donaldson,G A, PY - 1974/11/1/pubmed PY - 1974/11/1/medline PY - 1974/11/1/entrez SP - 734 EP - 40 JF - Annals of surgery JO - Ann Surg VL - 180 IS - 5 N2 - As further statistical evidence accumulates it is becoming evident that a major factor in the differing patient salvage between perforative and uncomplicated cancer of the colon and rectum is the element of infection. The absence of abdominal sepsis is undoubtedly responsible for the lessened morbidity and mortality found in the treatment of established fistulas. Surgical attention should therefore be directed first to the eradication of the primary source of infection, the perforated tumor. The safety with which an intestinal anastomosis may be made in the presence of edema and inflammation is a matter of mature judgement on the part of the operating surgeon. Postoperative suture line leakage should be avoidable. Extirpative surgery with or without anastomosis, coupled with the judicious drainage of the peritoneal cavity, antibiotic coverage, and blood volume support should continue to give improved results in the management of this distressing complication of cancer of the colon and rectum. SN - 0003-4932 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/4423043/Perforative_carcinoma_of_colon_and_rectum_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -