Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study

Abstract Background Since the length of the affected colon widely varies, the preoperative management of Hirschsprung’s disease varies from one hospital to another. For our cases in which the length of the aganglionic colon cannot be managed by enema, anal bougienage, or rectal irrigation, colorecta...

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Main Authors: Tsuyoshi Sakurai, Megumi Nakamura, Naobumi Endo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-08-01
Series:Annals of Pediatric Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43159-021-00120-9
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spelling doaj-3651bc2a5f334762a8ad465690afd8a62021-08-15T11:29:03ZengSpringerOpenAnnals of Pediatric Surgery2090-53942021-08-011711710.1186/s43159-021-00120-9Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective studyTsuyoshi Sakurai0Megumi Nakamura1Naobumi Endo2Department of Pediatric Surgery, Miyagi Children’s HospitalDepartment of Pediatric Surgery, Miyagi Children’s HospitalDepartment of Pediatric Surgery, Miyagi Children’s HospitalAbstract Background Since the length of the affected colon widely varies, the preoperative management of Hirschsprung’s disease varies from one hospital to another. For our cases in which the length of the aganglionic colon cannot be managed by enema, anal bougienage, or rectal irrigation, colorectal irrigation is used along with the placement of a transanal catheter for these patients as home or hospital management, until one-stage definitive surgery can be performed. No comparative studies have been conducted on the continuous tube placement method, and no study has utilized this method as home management. Thus, this study aimed to analyze the efficacy and feasibility of our proposed continuous tube placement management for patients with Hirschsprung’s disease in the hospital or even at home. Results We included 22 infants with Hirschsprung’s disease between 2008 and 2018. The patients were divided into two groups: those who were managed with enema, bougienage, and rectal irrigation (n = 6), and those who were managed with the placement of a continuous transanal tube and colorectal irrigation (n = 16). The group with continuous transanal tube placement was further divided into two groups: those who were preoperatively managed with a continuous anorectal tube at home (n = 7), and those at a hospital (n = 9). Preoperative demographic information and clinical details were retrospectively examined and compared between the two groups. Univariate analysis showed no significant differences in the backgrounds and clinical status between the enema, bougienage, and rectal irrigation group and the colorectal irrigation group. The patients in the home group were older and weighed more at the time of radical surgery than those in the hospital group (p = 0.0267, p = 0.0377, respectively). The total duration of hospitalization until radical surgery was significantly decreased in the home group (p = 0.0315). Conclusions The total duration of hospitalization was significantly reduced in patients undergoing home colorectal irrigation which was as effective as the conventional method, with no impact on the preoperative condition or postoperative outcomes. Hence, our home-based preoperative management for patients with Hirschsprung’s disease may be effective and potentially feasible for the management of patients with Hirschsprung’s disease.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43159-021-00120-9Anorectal tubeHirschsprung’s diseaseOne-stage surgeryPreoperativeRectal irrigation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tsuyoshi Sakurai
Megumi Nakamura
Naobumi Endo
spellingShingle Tsuyoshi Sakurai
Megumi Nakamura
Naobumi Endo
Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study
Annals of Pediatric Surgery
Anorectal tube
Hirschsprung’s disease
One-stage surgery
Preoperative
Rectal irrigation
author_facet Tsuyoshi Sakurai
Megumi Nakamura
Naobumi Endo
author_sort Tsuyoshi Sakurai
title Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study
title_short Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study
title_full Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study
title_fullStr Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for Hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study
title_sort feasibility of home and hospital colorectal irrigation with continuous tube placement for hirschsprung’s disease in neonates and infants: a comparative retrospective study
publisher SpringerOpen
series Annals of Pediatric Surgery
issn 2090-5394
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Background Since the length of the affected colon widely varies, the preoperative management of Hirschsprung’s disease varies from one hospital to another. For our cases in which the length of the aganglionic colon cannot be managed by enema, anal bougienage, or rectal irrigation, colorectal irrigation is used along with the placement of a transanal catheter for these patients as home or hospital management, until one-stage definitive surgery can be performed. No comparative studies have been conducted on the continuous tube placement method, and no study has utilized this method as home management. Thus, this study aimed to analyze the efficacy and feasibility of our proposed continuous tube placement management for patients with Hirschsprung’s disease in the hospital or even at home. Results We included 22 infants with Hirschsprung’s disease between 2008 and 2018. The patients were divided into two groups: those who were managed with enema, bougienage, and rectal irrigation (n = 6), and those who were managed with the placement of a continuous transanal tube and colorectal irrigation (n = 16). The group with continuous transanal tube placement was further divided into two groups: those who were preoperatively managed with a continuous anorectal tube at home (n = 7), and those at a hospital (n = 9). Preoperative demographic information and clinical details were retrospectively examined and compared between the two groups. Univariate analysis showed no significant differences in the backgrounds and clinical status between the enema, bougienage, and rectal irrigation group and the colorectal irrigation group. The patients in the home group were older and weighed more at the time of radical surgery than those in the hospital group (p = 0.0267, p = 0.0377, respectively). The total duration of hospitalization until radical surgery was significantly decreased in the home group (p = 0.0315). Conclusions The total duration of hospitalization was significantly reduced in patients undergoing home colorectal irrigation which was as effective as the conventional method, with no impact on the preoperative condition or postoperative outcomes. Hence, our home-based preoperative management for patients with Hirschsprung’s disease may be effective and potentially feasible for the management of patients with Hirschsprung’s disease.
topic Anorectal tube
Hirschsprung’s disease
One-stage surgery
Preoperative
Rectal irrigation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43159-021-00120-9
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