Title: The Management of Anastomotic Leak
1The Management of Anastomotic Leak
- John Hartley
- Academic Surgical Unit
- University of Hull
2The Management of Anastomotic Leak
- Surgical disaster
- Increased morbidity, mortality, hospital stay,
cost etc etc - Best avoided
- Will happen
- Suspect it (Assume it)
- Identify early and treat aggressively
3Anastomotic LeakAnastomoses in Lower Third of
Rectum (0-6cm)
UK Karanjia, Corder, Holdsworth, Heald BJS,
1991, 78, 196 France Ruler, Laurent, Premix BJS,
1998, 85, 355 USA Smith DCR, 1981, 22, 236
4Anastomotic LeakLeaking Anastomoses in Lower
Third of Rectum
- MORTALITY Increases by a factor of 20
- MORBIDITY Hospital stay10 days 30
days Permanent colostomy gt 50
5Anastomotic Leak
- The value of covering stoma
- 200 patients with low anterior resectionNo
defunctioning stoma 8 peritonitis.
Defunctioning stoma lt1 - Karanjia et al 1991, BJS 78, 196
- 1115 pts Geneva Multicentre Study Mortality 0.9
v 3.6 for covered vs not covered - Kassler et al, 1993, Int J Colorectal Dis, 8,
158
6Anastomotic Leak- whos to blame?
- Technical factors
- Ischaemia of bowel ends
- Oedema of bowel ends
- Anastomotic tension
- Poor suturing technique
- Haemorrhage
- Sepsis
- Patient factors
- Anaemia
- Sepsis
- Malnutrition
- Steroids
- Radiotherapy
- Cardiovascular problems
- (Bowel preparation)
7Anastomotic Leak
- Diagnosis
- Clinical signs
- Leucocytosis
- Positive blood cultures
- Abdominal/chest X-ray
- Gastrograffin enema
- CT scan
- Labelled white cell scan
- Fistulogram
8Anastomotic Leak
- Clinical signs
- Depend upon
- Severity of leak
- Degree of localisation
- Time of leak post op
- Whether the anastomosis is covered
9Anastomotic Leak
- Clinical Signs - may be non-specific
- Clinical leak in 22 of 379 pts (6) undergoing
surgery for CRC - - 7 (32) obvious peritonitis
- - 15 (68) initial misdiagnosis for mean of 4
days (range 0-11), 13 treated for cardiac
problems - 30 patients (8) developed cardiac symptoms of
whom 13 had a leak - Sutton CD et al. Colorectal Dis 2004621-2
10Anastomotic Leak
- Anticipation
- Off colour
- Failure to diurese
- Prolonged ileus
- (diarrhoea)
- Fever
- Failure to meet milestones
11Anastomotic Leak
- Clinical presentation
- Faecal peritonitis
- Clinically ill patient with abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically ill patient without abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically well patient with enterocutaneous
fistula
12Anastomotic Leak
- Faecal Peritonitis
- Severe abdominal pain
- General tenderness and guarding
- Silent abdomen
- Tachycardia, hypotension
- Oliguria / anuria
- Faecal leakage from drain or wound
13Anastomotic Leak
- Faecal Peritonitis diagnosis
- Erect chest X-ray
- Gastrograffin enema
- ?? CT scan
14Anastomotic Leak
- Faecal peritonitis management
- Confirm diagnosis
- Urgent resuscitation
- - iv fluids
- - CVP monitoring
- - Antibiotics
- - Urinary catheter
- Urgent re-exploration
15Anastomotic Leak
- Options at re-laparotomy
- External Drainage
- Suture Defect
- Suture Defect with Proximal Diversion
- Proximal Diversion
- Proximal Diversion with Drainage
- Exteriorise Leaking Segment
- Resect Anastomosis with Re-anastomosis
- Resect Anastomosis with end stoma, mucous
fistula or Hartmanns
16Anastomotic Leak
- Laparotomy for faecal peritonitis
- Confirm diagnosis
- Disconnect anastomosis Proximal stoma Mucus
fistula Close distal end - Wash out abdomen?
- Drain?
- Laparostomy
17Anastomotic Leak
- Laparotomy for leak following anterior resection
- 32 pts lavage, drainage, diversion
- 22 Hartmans (size of leak, viability of colon,
site of anastomosis) - - 8 of 19 survivors continuity restored
- 10 proximal diversion all had stoma reversed
- Parc et al. Dis Colon Rectum 200043579-87
18Anastomotic Leak
- Clinical presentation
- Faecal peritonitis
- Clinically ill patient with abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically ill patient without abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically well patient with enterocutaneous
fistula
19Sealed off leak with abscess
- Vague localised or general abdominal pain
- Localised peritoneal signs
- Temperature, tachycardia
- Ileus
- Multi organ failure Jaundice Renal failure ARDS
20Anastomotic Leak Sealed off major leak with
abscess (ill patient)
- Drainage
- Nutritional support
- Antibiotics
21Anastomotic Leak
- Clinical presentation
- Faecal peritonitis
- Clinically ill patient with abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically ill patient without abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically well patient with enterocutaneous
fistula
22Anastomotic Leak
- Clinical presentation
- Faecal peritonitis
- Clinically ill patient with abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically ill patient without abscess, no gross
abdominal signs - Clinically well patient with enterocutaneous
fistula
23Anastomotic Leak
- Enterocutaneous fistula in clinically well
- patient
- Delineate fistula CT Fistulogram
- Percutaneous drainage of abscess
- Exclude distal obstruction / foreign body
- Correct anaemia, malnutrition, electrolytes
- Control fistula skin care suction /
bags somatostatin
24Anastomotic Leak
- Conclusions
- Leaks are common
- Leaks cause considerable morbidity and mortality
- Maintain high index of suspicion
- Manage aggressively and safely
- Leaks are better avoided than treated covering
stoma
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26Anastomotic Failure
- Sealed off major leak with abscess
- Vague localised or general abdominal pain
- Localised peritoneal signs
- Temperature, tachycardia
- Ileus
- Multi organ failure Jaundice Renal
failure ARDS
27- Free gas post
- Laparotomy
- Plane XR almost
- always resolved
- by 5th day
- New gas worry!
28Anastomotic Leak
- Enterocutaneous fistula management
- Improve general condition
- Feeding line with specialist nursing
- Control if possible with stoma or proximal loop
- Drain abscess / collection if possible
- Intensive attention to input / output
- Specialised skin / stoma care
- ? Help from fistula unit