SURGICAL TREATMENT OF INNOCENT DISEASES OF THE DISTAL COLON

Author(s):  
HUGH DEVINE
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 542-547
Author(s):  
ORVAR SWENSON

A NEW concept of the pathology and surgical treatment of congenital megacolon has been published. The pathology was described as absence of ganglion cells in Auerbach's plexus in the rectosigmoid and rectum. This segmental congenital defect in the myenteric plexus was postulated to account for the absence of peristalsis in the distal colon. Surgical resection of the functionally defective bowel relieved these patients. The following clinical experiences and experiments sustain this concept. Colostomy above the rectosigmoid in four patients with congenital megacolon relieved abdominal distention and colonic stasis. Six months after colostomy closure, these four patients, in whom rectosigmoid resection was not performed, suffered a complete recurrence of the disease. Reopening the colostomy in these patients again relieved all their symptoms with return of the colon to approximately normal size. The dilatation and hypertrophy of the colon seem to have been secondary to a functional obstruction in the rectum and rectosigmoid. Tracings of large bowel peristalsis were made to determine the nature of the rectosigmoid dysfunction. Three small rubber tubes with balloons attached were inserted through a transverse colostomy and positioned so that one balloon was at the splenic flexure, one in the descending colon, and one in the rectosigmoid. The balloons were inflated with 10 cc. of air and attached to recording manometers. Normal recordings were secured from two patients who had transverse colostomy as a result of right colectomy for gangrenous intussusception. The kymograph tracings showed a progression of the peristaltic waves from the transverse colon to the anus.


Author(s):  
M.D. Graham

The recent development of the scanning electron microscope has added great impetus to the study of ultrastructural details of normal human ossicles. A thorough description of the ultrastructure of the human ossicles is required in order to determine changes associated with disease processes following medical or surgical treatment.Human stapes crura were obtained at the time of surgery for clinical otosclerosis and from human cadaver material. The specimens to be examined by the scanning electron microscope were fixed immediately in the operating room in a cold phosphate buffered 2% gluteraldehyde solution, washed with Ringers, post fixed in cold 1% osmic acid and dehydrated in graded alcohol. Specimens were transferred from alcohol to a series of increasing concentrations of ethyl alcohol and amyl acetate. The tissue was then critical point dried, secured to aluminum stubs and coated with gold, approximately 150A thick on a rotating stage in a vacuum evaporator. The specimens were then studied with the Kent-Cambridge S4-10 Scanning Electron Microscope at an accelerating voltage of 20KV.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A531-A531
Author(s):  
R GILL ◽  
B KUNHIRAMAN ◽  
S SAKSENA ◽  
S TYAGI ◽  
P DUDEJA

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