Epidemiology, management and outcome of ultrashort bowel syndrome in infancy
Epidemiology, management and outcome of ultrashort bowel syndrome in infancy
Ultrashort bowel syndrome (USBS) is a group of heterogeneous disorders where the length of small bowel is less than 10 cm or 10% of expected for the age. It is caused by massive loss of the gut which in the neonatal period can be a result of vanishing gastroschisis or surgical resection following mid-gut volvulus, jejunoileal atresia and/or extensive necrotising enterocolitis. The exact prevalence of USBS is not known although there is a clear trend towards increasing numbers because of increased incidence and improved survival. Long-Term parenteral nutrition (PN) is the mainstay of treatment and is best delivered by a multidisciplinary intestinal rehabilitation team. Promoting adaptation is vital to improving long-Term survival and can be achieved by optimising feeds, reducing intestinal failure liver disease and catheter-related bloodstream infections. Surgical techniques that can promote enteral tolerance and hence improve outcome include establishing intestinal continuity and bowel lengthening procedures. The outcome for USBS is similar to patients with intestinal failure due to other causes and only a small proportion of children who develop irreversible complications of PN and will need intestinal transplantation. In this review, we will summarise the available evidence focusing particularly on the epidemiology, management strategies and outcome.
infancy, intestinal failure, ultrashort bowel syndrome
F551-F556
Batra, Akshay
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Keys, Simon Charlie
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Johnson, Mark John
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Wheeler, Robert A.
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Beattie, Robert Mark
9a66af0b-f81c-485c-b01d-519403f0038a
1 November 2017
Batra, Akshay
822f891e-87ca-41d9-b68d-27c395e88809
Keys, Simon Charlie
aa1438f0-67cf-45db-bfe1-2b6dde8d019b
Johnson, Mark John
ce07b5dd-b12b-47df-a5df-cd3b9447c9ed
Wheeler, Robert A.
266f8b1b-fb63-49d5-9b93-21242761e7b7
Beattie, Robert Mark
9a66af0b-f81c-485c-b01d-519403f0038a
Batra, Akshay, Keys, Simon Charlie, Johnson, Mark John, Wheeler, Robert A. and Beattie, Robert Mark
(2017)
Epidemiology, management and outcome of ultrashort bowel syndrome in infancy.
Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition, 102 (6), .
(doi:10.1136/archdischild-2016-311765).
Abstract
Ultrashort bowel syndrome (USBS) is a group of heterogeneous disorders where the length of small bowel is less than 10 cm or 10% of expected for the age. It is caused by massive loss of the gut which in the neonatal period can be a result of vanishing gastroschisis or surgical resection following mid-gut volvulus, jejunoileal atresia and/or extensive necrotising enterocolitis. The exact prevalence of USBS is not known although there is a clear trend towards increasing numbers because of increased incidence and improved survival. Long-Term parenteral nutrition (PN) is the mainstay of treatment and is best delivered by a multidisciplinary intestinal rehabilitation team. Promoting adaptation is vital to improving long-Term survival and can be achieved by optimising feeds, reducing intestinal failure liver disease and catheter-related bloodstream infections. Surgical techniques that can promote enteral tolerance and hence improve outcome include establishing intestinal continuity and bowel lengthening procedures. The outcome for USBS is similar to patients with intestinal failure due to other causes and only a small proportion of children who develop irreversible complications of PN and will need intestinal transplantation. In this review, we will summarise the available evidence focusing particularly on the epidemiology, management strategies and outcome.
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Accepted/In Press date: 13 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 October 2017
Published date: 1 November 2017
Keywords:
infancy, intestinal failure, ultrashort bowel syndrome
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 479620
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479620
ISSN: 1359-2998
PURE UUID: 7e4c7678-58d8-4893-807c-99536bbf6707
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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:42
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:52
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Author:
Akshay Batra
Author:
Simon Charlie Keys
Author:
Mark John Johnson
Author:
Robert A. Wheeler
Author:
Robert Mark Beattie
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