Abstract

We reviewed the results of local surgical treatment of stoma prolapse, a long-term complication of stoma construction. Fifteen patients treated for stomal prolapse between 2009 and 2020 at the authors’ and affiliated hospitals were included in this study. The treatment comprised local laparotomic stomal reconstruction (LLSR) in nine patients and stapling repair (SR) in six. We compared and evaluated the clinical and surgical information and postoperative complications. Operation time was significantly shorter in the SR group than in the LLSR group: 20 and 53 min, respectively (p = 0.036). The duration of postoperative hospitalization was shorter in the SR group than in the LLSR group: 5.5 and 8 days, respectively; the difference was not significant (p = 0.088). No short-term complications were found in either group. Regarding long-term, postoperative complications, parastomal hernias developed after 2.5 years in one patient in the LLSR group and after 6 months in one patient in the SR group; both patients had histories of parastomal hernia surgery and had relatively high body mass indices. Local surgery for stomal prolapse was minimally invasive and performed safely. In patients with a history of surgery for parastomal hernia, attention must be paid to the potential of parastomal hernia developing as a postoperative complication.

Highlights

  • This study evaluated the results of the aforementioned local surgical treatments for stomal prolapse at the authors’ and other affiliated hospitals

  • The treatment consisted of a certain type of local surgery, with local laparotomic stomal reconstruction (LLSR) in nine patients and stapling repair (SR) in six

  • Altemeier’s procedure, another extraperitoneal local surgical procedure was performed by Mittel et al [5]; the postoperative stomal prolapse recurrence rate was high (43.6%), with most cases occurring within 1 year

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Gastrointestinal stoma construction is sometimes necessary in the treatment of gastrointestinal, gynecological, and urinary tract diseases. 150,000 operations are performed yearly in the USA [1], with artificial anus construction currently the most commonly used technique. Stoma construction can present problems, with complications reported in 20–70% of cases [2]

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