Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate the incidence of parastomal hernias (PSHs) after end-colostomy formation using a polypropylene mesh in a randomized controlled trial versus conventional colostomy formation.
Background: A PSH is the most frequent complication after stoma formation. Symptoms may range from mild abdominal pain to life-threatening obstruction and strangulation.
Purpose: Parastomal hernia (PSH) is a common complication after colostomy formation. Recent studies indicate that mesh implantation during formation of a colostomy might prevent a PSH. To determine if placement of a retromuscular mesh at the colostomy site is a feasible, safe and effective procedure in preventing a parastomal hernia, we performed a multicentre randomized controlled trial in 11 large teaching hospitals and three university centres in The Netherlands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Biochem Behav
September 1988
Injection of norepinephrine into the hypothalamus of methylcholanthrene sarcoma-bearing rats elicited a normal feeding response both prior to and following the development of anorexia. Feeding elicited by cholinergic stimulation of the hypothalamus of tumor-bearing rats with carbachol was normal prior to the onset of anorexia, but decreased in magnitude as the anorexia became more severe. These data indicate that noradrenergic feeding mechanisms in the hypothalamus of tumor-bearing rats are functioning normally during anorexia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe syndrome of cancer anorexia includes early satiety in man and a reduction in the duration of feeding in experimental animals. These aberrations suggest dysfunction of peripheral and/or central nervous system satiety mechanisms in tumor-bearing individuals. Since the gut peptide, cholecystokinin (CCK), has been implicated as a potent satiety cue in man and animals, plasma and brain concentrations of CCK were measured by radioimmunoassay in anorectic tumor-bearing rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction of cholecystokinin-induced hypophagia with cancer anorexia was investigated within both acute (Walker 256 carcinosarcoma) and chronic (methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma) animal models of cancer anorexia. Cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK8) effectively reduced feeding for at least one hour in both groups of rats. However, this peptide was no more effective in inducing hypophagia in tumor-bearing rats than in nontumor-bearing control rats when tested at a variety of doses (0.
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