Abstract

Microvascular injury and ischaemia may be factors in anastomotic recurrence after resection for Crohn's disease. This hypothesis was explored in a ferret model of multifocal intestinal infarction. At laparotomy, isolated loops of small intestine were injected intraarterially with styrene microspheres (test loop) or saline (control). At a second laparotomy 72 h later, test and control loops were divided and an end-to-end anastomosis performed between test loops (n = 2), test and control loops (n = 9) or control loops (n = 2). Abnormalities including chronic transmural inflammation, ulceration and granuloma formation were identified 2 weeks after the second operation in ten of the 11 surviving animals; changes were confined to the test loops and were more prominent adjacent to the anastomosis. No abnormalities were seen in control loops. The combination of two self-limiting ischaemic insults can produce a pattern of intestinal inflammation similar to that seen in anastomotic recurrence in Crohn's disease.

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