Abstract

The aim of this retrospective clinical study was to record and analyse the immediate and long term results obtained from emergency operation for carcinoma of the large bowel. In a 12-year period (1991-2003), 154 patients were operated on for carcinoma of the colon. In 29 patients (19%; 11 males, 18 females, m.a. 72.8 years and 67.5 years respectively), the operation was performed urgently. In 21 (72.5%) there was a complete obstruction located in 17 (81%) at the sigmoid, in 2 (9.5%) in right flexure and in 2 (9.5%) in left flexure. Five patients (17%) had developed peritonitis due to perforation proximal to the tumour and three patients (10.5%) had developed necrotic colitis and haemorrhage due to the obstruction. In 23 patients (79.5%) a radical curative operation was feasible [11 (38%) subtotal colectomies with ileo-rectal anastomosis, seven (24%) Hartman's, three (10%) right hemicolectomy and two (7%) on table bowel lavage plus colectomy with ileo-rectal anastomosis] and in six (11%) only palliative operations could be done (transverse loop colostomy). In all cases the postoperative period was uneventful. Three patients with palliative operation were submitted to a radical curative operation 2 months later and the other three patients died 6 months later from causes irrelevant to the primary disease. It is concluded that in this series of patients radical curative operations for carcinoma of the large bowel even under urgent conditions were feasible in the cases without additional complications, eliminating the necessity for reoperations later on.

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