巨结肠疾病拉通手术后直肠神经支配的重塑:与保留过渡区确定标准的相关性

IF 1.3
Raj P Kapur, Michael A Arnold, Miriam R Conces, Lusine Ambartsumyan, Jeffrey Avansino, Marc Levitt, Richard Wood, Kelley J Mast
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引用次数: 12

摘要

背景:在Hirschsprung病(HSCR)手术后,glut1阳性粘膜下神经肥大用于诊断肿瘤直肠保留过渡区。我们假设在牵引手术中被切断的盆腔神经进入肿瘤直肠以模拟过渡区。方法:对20例有牵拉后梗阻症状的患者进行活检和重切,测定glut1阳性粘膜下神经的密度(神经/100x视野)和最大直径。他们在17年的原始和/或重新切除排除了过渡带的明确特征(myenteric hypoganglionosis或部分圆周神经节病)。比较28例尸体标本和6例手术非HSCR标本以及14例原发性HSCR切除标本的术后对照数据。在可能的情况下,跟踪从附着的原生盆腔软组织或神经节直肠袖进入牵拉结肠的神经。结果:1岁以下非hscr婴儿的11个结肠中均不存在glut1阳性粘膜下神经,除了直肠中有少量。在17例年龄较大的非hscr对照中,偶有glut1阳性神经出现在直肠前结肠,而在直肠中更大且数量更多。在重做切除中,拉通后标本的glut1阳性粘膜下神经分布与年龄相适应的非hscr直肠对照组没有显著差异,盆腔glut1阳性神经从未被观察到穿透拉通结肠。然而,新直肠中glut1阳性神经的密度和直径明显大于基于直肠前位置的预期。结论:牵拉后标本的粘膜下神经支配不支持原生盆腔神经支配新直肠的假设,但表明通过重塑来建立与年龄相适应的直肠glut1阳性神经支配的密度和口径。后者不应被解释为从先前完成的拉通直肠活检中的过渡区拉通。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Remodeling of Rectal Innervation After Pullthrough Surgery for Hirschsprung Disease: Relevance to Criteria for the Determination of Retained Transition Zone.

Background: After pullthrough surgery for Hirschsprung disease (HSCR), Glut1-positive submucosal nerve hypertrophy is used to diagnose retained transition zone in the neorectum. We hypothesized that pelvic nerves, severed during pullthrough surgery, sprout into the neorectum to mimic transition zone.

Methods: The density (nerves/100x field) and maximum diameter of Glut1-positive submucosal nerves were measured in biopsies and redo resections from 20 patients with post-pullthrough obstructive symptoms. Their original and/or redo resections excluded unequivocal features of transition zone (myenteric hypoganglionosis or partial circumferential aganglionosis) in 17. Postoperative values were compared with control data from 28 cadaveric and 6 surgical non-HSCR specimens, and 14 primary HSCR resections. When possible, nerves were tracked from attached native pelvic soft tissue or aganglionic rectal cuff into the pulled-through colon.

Results: Glut1-positive submucosal nerves were not present in the 11 colons of non-HSCR infants less than 1 year of age, except sparsely in the rectum. In 17 older non-HSCR controls, occasional Glut1-positive nerves were observed in prerectal colon and were larger and more numerous in the rectum. In redo resections, Glut1-positive submucosal innervation in post-pullthrough specimens did not differ significantly from age-appropriate non-HSCR rectal controls and pelvic Glut1-positive nerves were never observed to penetrate the pulled-through colon. However, the density and caliber of Glut1-positive nerves in the neorectums were significantly greater than expected based on the prerectal location from which the pulled-through bowel originated.

Conclusions: Submucosal innervation in post-pullthrough specimens does not support the hypothesis that native pelvic nerves innervate the neorectum, but suggests remodeling occurs to establish the age-appropriate density and caliber of rectal Glut1-positive innervation. The latter should not be interpreted as transition zone pullthrough in a rectal biopsy from a previously done pullthrough.

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