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Laparoscopic Redo Pull-Through for Hirschsprung Disease Due to Innervation Disorders.

BACKGROUND: Reoperations in Hirschsprung disease (HD) may be required due to pathological problems. We conducted this retrospective study to determine the incidence and outcomes of innervation disorders among HD patients following pull-through operation.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the data of patients who underwent pull-through procedure from 2005 to 2017. Only patients who underwent reoperation due to histological disorders were analyzed. Patients with mechanical obstruction that caused recurrent constipation were excluded.

RESULTS: There were 836 patients who got treated for HD in our department during the study period, and of these, 72 (8.6%) had redo operation. Thirty-one out of the 72 patients (43.1%) showed abnormal histological findings on full-thickness biopsies. Primary operations included totally transanal endorectal pull-through (18), laparoscopic-assisted Duhamel (5) and Soave (8) techniques. The full-thickness biopsies before the reoperation showed aganglionosis (n = 8, 1 was residual resulted from false-positive intraoperative frozen sections and 7 were acquired aganglionosis), transition-zone (3), intestinal neuronal dysplasia B (IND B, n = 15), and hypoganglionosis (5). The final diagnoses according to the resection specimens of the initial and second operations were HD (11), Hirschsprung-associated IND B (15), and Hirschsprung-associated hypoganglionosis (5). Reoperation consisted of laparoscopic-assisted Duhamel (14) and Soave procedures (17). In these patients, 77.4% had excellent/good bowel function, 16.1% were fair, and 6.5% were poor.

CONCLUSIONS: Innervation disorders are still the underlying causes of recurrent constipation in almost half of all HD patients requiring redo pull-through operation. Most patients have a satisfactory outcome after redoing laparoscopic-assisted Duhamel or Soave operation.

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