Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess gastrointestinal function and quality of life, including occupational, social, and sexual function, in 75 patients who underwent pelvic pouch construction between November 1984 and May 1988 at our institution. Complications occurred in 45 percent of patients after pouch construction and in 17 percent after ileostomy closure. One patient died from sepsis caused by an anastomotic leak after ileostomy closure. The most common complication was a pouch-anal anastomotic stricture (22 percent), and the complication with the greatest potential morbidity was pouch-anal dehiscence (8 percent), which was highly predictive of pouch failure. Functional results were assessed by questionnaire during the 3-month period after ileostomy closure in all 58 patients who successfully attained intestinal continuity. A second assessment was performed at 15 ± 11 months after ileostomy closure in 52 patients whose continuity had been restored for longer than 3 months. In an overall assessment, 94 percent of all patients with restored intestinal continuity (73 percent of entire patient group) rated the pouch as being superior to a permanent ileostomy and 92 percent (71 percent of entire group) would go through another pouch procedure. These results support the continued recommendation of this procedure as an acceptable alternative to proctocolectomy and permanent ileostomy in patients with ulcerative colitis or familial polyposis.

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