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KMID : 1152420230290010024
Advances in Pediatric Surgery
2023 Volume.29 No. 1 p.24 ~ p.31
Intestinal Length Growth Differences Among Diseases Underlying Pediatric Short Bowel Syndrome
Cho Yu-Jeong

Kwon Hyun-Hee
Kwon Yong-Jae
Kim Seong-Chul
Kim Dae-Yeon
Namgoong Jung-Man
Abstract
Purpose : Increases in intestinal length (IL) in patients with short bowel syndrome (SBS) may differ by age and underlying diseases. This study analyzed the elongation rate of the remnant IL according to underlying disease to establish a therapeutic plan for intestinal rehabilitation.

Methods : The charts of SBS patients who underwent surgery at our center from 2000 to 2018 were retrospectively reviewed. The enrolled patients included those with a remaining IL less than 25% of the average and those with a remaining IL of approximately 50% who had been administered parenteral nutrition for more than one year. Patients were excluded if they underwent only one operation or two operations with the first being a serial transverse enteroplasty procedure, meaning that base length was not known.

Results : Ten patients were enrolled. Causes of SBS included total colonic aganglionosis (TCA) in seven patients (70.0%), necrotizing enteritis in two (20.0%), and malrotation/volvulus in one (10.0%). The IL growth rate in the three non-TCA patients was 9-fold higher than the estimated proportion, whereas the growth rate of the IL according to age was significantly lower in the TCA than in the non-TCA group (p=0.01).

Conclusion : The IL growth rate may differ between TCA and non-TCA patients in SBS. Rehabilitation protocols might consider the underlying disease. Additional larger trials are required to confirm these findings.
KEYWORD
Short bowel syndrome, Total colonic aganglionosis, Pediatrics
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