Abstract

The long-term effects of bladder reconstruction using bowel were studied in rats. Bladder surgery consisted of cystotomy and closure, ileo- or colocystoplasty, or placement of a reverse serosal (Thal) patch of ileum. At least one-third of all groups received prophylactic cefaclor, postoperatively. Monthly urine cultures were obtained, and survivors were sacrificed at 1 year.Antimicrobial therapy markedly reduced the incidence of chronic colonization after cystoplasty. However, the majority of rats in the Thal patch group remained colonized because of acquired vesicoileal fistulae. Vesical stones were often present in this group and were also seen in 6 of 43 (14%) and 3 of 33 (9%) in the ileocystoplasty and colocystoplasty groups, respectively. Transitional cell papillomas and/or hyperplasia was seen at 20 of 42 (48%) uroileal and 20 of 31 (64%) urocolonic anastomoses (p = .15). Hyperplastic lesions could not be correlated with bacteriuria. Focal non-papillary transitional cell carcinoma was seen once in the colocystoplasty group, and low grade papillary transitional cell tumors were noted once in each of the cystostomy and ileocystoplasty groups and twice in Thal patch rats with ileovesical fistulae. These findings suggest that the rat uroenteric anastomosis is susceptible to proliferative change which is rarely malignant in nature and occurs in the presence or absence of bacteriuria.

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