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[Modern diagnostic strategy in ileus].

During the last 4 years (11/93-11/97) 330 patients with acute bowel obstruction were treated and analysed retrospectively. 80% of the obstructions (n = 265) were in the small bowel and 20% (n = 65) in the large bowel localized. Adhesions were the main cause in 65.7% (n = 174) of all small bowel obstructions, and one third (35.1%, n = 61) of these patients were treated conservatively. In the large bowel, however, 37% were caused by obstructing colon carcinoma mainly localized in the rectosigmoid region. Mechanical bowel obstruction remains to be one of the most common emergencies in general surgery. A successful treatment is based on a rapid and correct diagnosis followed by an immediate surgical intervention if indicated. There are no reliable clinical, laboratory or radiological signs of bowel strangulation available. Preoperative diagnostic examinations should confirm bowel obstruction, determine its localization and origin and exclude other pathologies. Furthermore, it should help in selecting a patient subgroup with small bowel obstruction due to adhesions, which might be treated conservatively. Preoperative diagnostic procedures include case history, clinical examination, basic laboratory tests and a plain abdominal x-ray. In patients with suspected small bowel obstruction due to adhesions without any signs of strangulation a contrast medium follow-through study may be indicated. If the contrast medium fails to pass into the colon within 5 hours, a surgical exploration is recommended. In large bowel obstruction a contrast medium enema, a computed tomography or a colonoscopy are valuable diagnostic tools.

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