A 73-year-old woman with rectal adenocarcinoma at 10 cm from the anal verge underwent
laparoscopy-assisted low anterior resection with a protective loop ileostomy. Postoperatively
the patient received adjuvant radiotherapy and chemotherapy for 6 months. After the
chemoradiation treatments, a digital rectal examination prior to ileostomy takedown
revealed anastomotic obstruction. Under direct visualization using a colonoscope (CF-Q240;
Olympus Optical Co, Ltd, Japan), no opening was found in the anastomotic occlusive
web (Figure [1]). Fluoroscopy showed a blind end at the level of the anastomosis (Figure [2]). An injector (NM-200U; Olympus) was inserted into the center of the circular staple
line at the level of the anastomosis, and diluted dye (Telebrix; Guerbet, France)
was injected to identify the proximal lumen under fluoroscopic guidance (Figure [3]). Injection of water through the injector dilated the lumen of the proximal atrophied
bowel. The anastomotic occlusive web was incised in a radial fashion using a needle-papillotome
(MTW Endoskopie, Germany) (Figure [4]). Under endoscopic observation, a controlled radial expansion balloon dilator (Boston
Scientific Cork Ltd, Ireland) was inserted through the web opening and insufflated
with water (Figure [5]). The successful destruction of the occlusive web facilitated passage of the colonoscope,
allowing evaluation of the entire colon (Figure [6]). The patient tolerated the procedure well without complications.
Figure 1 Appearance of a completely occluding web at the level of the anastomosis, 8 cm from
the anal verge.
Figure 2 Fluoroscopy showing a blind end at the level of the anastomosis.
Figure 3 Fluoroscopic identification of the proximal bowel after dye injection at the center
of the circular staple line.
Figure 4 Rupture of the anastomotic occlusive web using a needle-knife at the site of injection.
Figure 5 Water insufflation of the ”through the scope” hydrostatic balloon dilation at the
level of the anastomosis.
Figure 6 Complete destruction of the occlusive web after balloon dilation and restoration of
bowel lumen.
Management of anastomotic strictures is mainly performed endoscopically by balloon
dilation [1]
[2]
[3]. Patients with a completely occluding anastomotic web lack even a small opening
through which a guide wire can be inserted, making further major corrective surgery
technically demanding. In one patient, a completely obstructed colonic anastomosis
was managed using a combined antegrade-retrograde endoscopic rendezvous technique
using two colonoscopes [4]. With our endoscopic technique, injection of a dye under fluoroscopic guidance enabled
us to identify the proximal lumen and to rupture the occlusive web successfully.
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