Objectives: To determine the frequency of readmission for early postoperative small-bowel obstruction (SBO), to highlight factors that may predispose to this condition, to define the risks of strangulation and to compare the immediate and long-term risks and benefits of operative versus nonoperative treatment.

Design: A chart review.

Setting: The Sir Mortimer B. Davis-Jewish General Hospital, a university-affiliated teaching hospital in Montreal.

Patients: Out of a total of 1001 cases of SBO in 552 patients, 30 patients were readmitted within 50 days of a previous laparotomy with the diagnosis of SBO.

Intervention: Selective nonoperative management and exploratory laparotomy.

Main Outcome Measures: The value of nonoperative management and need for operation.

Results: Adhesions were the cause of the obstruction in most cases (24); other causes were Crohn's disease (2), hernia (1), malignant neoplasm (1) and a combination of adhesions and malignant disease (2). Thirteen (43%) of the procedures preceding the obstruction were primary small-bowel operations. There was only 1 episode of strangulated bowel. Of the patients readmitted for SBO, 7 (23%) were treated operatively with a long-term recurrence rate of 57% compared with 63% for those treated nonoperatively for the SBO. The median time to recurrence was 0.1 years (range from 0.02-6 yr) for those whose SBO was managed operatively, compared with 0.7 years (range from 0.08-5 yr) for those managed nonoperatively for the SBO. The median length of stay for patients managed operatively for SBO was 12 days (range from 9-17 d) compared with 6 days (range from 2-33 d) for those managed nonoperatively.

Conclusions: Readmission for SBO within 50 days of a previous laparotomy represents a small percentage of all cases of SBO. They frequently follow small-bowel operations. Cases of strangulation are no more common than in general cases of SBO. Patients treated nonoperatively for SBO did not experience less favourable outcomes with respect to resolution of symptoms, length of stay, risk of recurrence and reoperation. Thus, operative intervention is not necessary in an otherwise stable patient.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3684676PMC

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