Showing posts with label Surgery For Crohn's Disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Surgery For Crohn's Disease. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2014

Crohn's Disease Surgery

Crohn's Disease Surgery
In as much as surgery is often done as a way of addressing Crohn’s disease, this does not mean that it is a cure. Only a small section of ones small intestines should be removed to restore normal functions in case a Crohn’s disease surgery is needed. But the disease has a tendency of returning to the unaffected areas making it possible that you will still require surgery again.


But in the case that no medicine can control your symptoms, then that is when Crohn’s disease surgery is needed. In addition, surgery may be needed if you have serious medicines side effect or may be in the process of treatment your developed complications among them fistulas, or bowel obstructions. In essence, surgery may be needed in the following cases:


v  Blockage of the bowel or obstruction


v  anal tears or fissures


v  Perforations in the large intestines


v  Cancer tissue


v  Severe disease that is failing to treatment response.


v  Severe bleeding that needs ongoing transfusions of blood.


However, it is important that you put surgery choices into consideration. It is good that it is usually done for Crohn’s disease but let us again go through on what you can think about. Surgery can improve a child’s well-being and basically quality of life and as well restore normal growth and sexual development. It is in rare cases that intestinal transplant is used in the treatment of Crohn’s disease. But the intestine is always removed and replaced with another person’s small intestines that maybe recently died and apparently donated his or her organs. But then what are the consideration points?


There are always choices on surgery. A resection process where by the diseased portion of the intestine is hived off and the intestine healthy end reattached is one. This always does not cure and in most cases leaves room for the cancer to reappear in another place. Strictureplasty surgery is where a lengthwise cut in the intestine is made by the surgeon who then sews the opening in the opposite direction together. This is always done when the doctor wants to salvage as much as of the intestine as possible.  If the surgeon removes the large intestine and rectum and then leave the lower end of the small intestine, this will then be the proctocolectomy and ileostonomy. Always the anus is sealed and a small opening called stoma made on the skin of the lower abdomen. A process that allows the doctor run an endoscope in the intestine normally referred to as balloon dilation but it is a process yet to be established well enough.