Surgery
Volume 26, Issue 8 , Pages 343-346, August 2008

Intestinal fistulas

Dominic Slade is a Consultant Colorectal and intestinal Failure Surgeon at Hope Hospital, Salford, UK. ConfIicts of interest: none declared

Nigel Scott MD FRCS is a Consultant Colorectal Surgeon at Royal Preston Hospital Conflicts of interest: none declared

Abstract 

An intestinal fistula is a communication between the gut and another epithelial surface. Primary disease of the gut (Crohn’s disease, diverticular disease, colorectal cancer, radiation enteritis) can all lead to fistula formation which then requires resection of the diseased bowel to close the fistula. Injury (usually iatrogenic) produces a fistula through normal gut and if circumstances are favourable such an injury can close spontaneously. Some postoperative fistulae will not close spontaneously and they require a systematic approach that eliminates sepsis (S), restores nutrition (N), determines anatomy (A) and leads to a closure procedure (P) - SNAP. Sound abdominal closure is an essential feature of surgery to close an intestinal fistula.

Keywords: crohns disease, intestinal fistula, postoperative fistula

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PII: S0263-9319(08)00113-0

doi:10.1016/j.mpsur.2008.05.010

Surgery
Volume 26, Issue 8 , Pages 343-346, August 2008