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  Vol. 133 No. 9, September 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Changing Presentation and Management of Neutropenic Enterocolitis

Howard K. Song, MD; Daniel Kreisel, MD; Robert Canter, MD; Alexander S. Krupnick, MD; Edward A. Stadtmauer, MD; Gordon Buzby, MD

Arch Surg. 1998;133:979-982.

Objective  To characterize the current clinical presentation and management of neutropenic enterocolitis.

Design  Retrospective review of records of oncology unit patients requiring general surgical consultation for abdominal complaints in a 1-year period.

Setting  Oncology unit of a tertiary care, university teaching hospital.

Patients and Interventions  Fourteen patients diagnosed as having neutropenic enterocolitis were managed conservatively with operation reserved for failure of conservative therapy.

Main Outcome Measures  Clinical data from patients at the time of presentation and during treatment for neutropenic enterocolitis.

Results  All 14 patients diagnosed as having neutropenic enterocolitis were receiving chemotherapy for solid tumors or leukemias. Seven patients were undergoing stem cell or autologous bone marrow transplantation. Presenting symptoms and physical examination findings were nonspecific. All patients except one had neutropenia at the time of diagnosis. Computed tomographic scans of the abdomen were the most useful confirmatory study for the diagnosis of neutropenic enterocolitis. All patients except one had resolution of neutropenic enterocolitis with conservative therapy. One patient whose course of conservative management failed had protracted neutropenia and required operation for resection of bowel with full-thickness necrosis.

Conclusions  Neutropenic enterocolitis has evolved from a complication of patients with leukemia to a disease of patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy for many malignancies, solid as well as hematologic. Diagnosis of neutropenic enterocolitis continues to be a challenge, as patients typically present with nonspecific gastrointestinal tract symptoms. Neutropenia and computed tomographic scan findings are useful adjuncts in diagnosing neutropenic enterocolitis. Timely conservative treatment frequently allows resolution of neutropenic enterocolitis without operation.


From the Department of Surgery, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Gastrointestinal Complications in the Neutropenic Patient: Characterization and Differentiation with Abdominal CT
Kirkpatrick and Greenberg
Radiology 2003;226:668-674.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

Nursing Care of the Child with Neutropenic Enterocolitis
King
Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing 2002;19:198-204.
ABSTRACT  





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