Alejandro Espí
University of Valencia
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Featured researches published by Alejandro Espí.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1999
Miguel Minguez; Francisco Melo; Alejandro Espí; Eduardo García-Granero; Francisco Mora; Salvador Lledó; Adolfo Benages
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical and manometric results of three different doses of botulinum toxin and two methods of injection for the treatment of chronic idiopathic anal fissure. METHODS: Sixty-nine patients with chronic anal fissure were included in a nonrandomized, prospective trial of intrasphincteric injection of botulinum toxin. All patients reported postdefecatory anal pain lasting more than two months. Scoring systems were developed for anal pain, bleeding, and defecatory difficulty. Maximum resting and squeeze anal pressures were determined before and one month after treatment. Twenty-three patients undergoing a 5-U injection of diluted botulinum toxin A (BOTOX®) on each side of the anal sphincter (total dose, 10 U) constituted the first group. In a second group 27 patients were injected as previously described, with an additional 5-U injection below the fissure (total dose, 15 U). The 19 patients constituting the third group received a 7-U injection on each side of the anus and below the fissure (total dose, 21 U). All patients were followed up for at least six months. RESULTS: Pain relief one month after treatment was more evident in the second and the third group (48 percent of patients in the first group, 74 percent in the second group, and 100 percent in the third group). A significant reduction of the mean resting pressure was demonstrated only in Groups II and III (P<0.05), whereas the mean squeeze pressure significantly decreased in the three groups (P<0.01 in Group I andP<0.001 in Groups II and III). Fifty-two percent of the patients in the first group, 30 percent in the second group, and 37 percent in the third group were reinjected during the follow-up period, because of persistence of symptomatology or early relapse. The need for surgery was similar in the first and the second group (17 and 19 percent, respectively) and clearly lower in the last group (5 percent). No serious complications or incontinence attributable to this therapeutic modality developed in any patient. CONCLUSIONS: Intrasphincteric injection of botulinum toxin is a reliable new option in the treatment of uncomplicated chronic anal fissure. The healing rate is related to the dose and probably to the number of puncture sites. No permanent damage to the continence mechanism was detected in these patients.
Digestive Surgery | 2004
Stephanie García-Botello; Juan García-Armengol; Eduardo García-Granero; Alejandro Espí; C. Juan; F. López-Mozos; Salvador Lledó
Aim: A prospective review of the complications of ileostomy construction and takedown. Materials and Methods: One hundred twenty-seven consecutive patients undergoing construction of a loop ileostomy were included in a prospective nonrandomized computer database. Complications of the loop ileostomy were assessed prior to and after closure. Three closure techniques were performed [enterotomy suture (25.7%), resection and hand sewn (31.2%) or stapled anastomosis (43.1%)] and compared. Results: One hundred twenty-seven (73 male, 54 female) patients, mean age 54 years were included from 1992 to 2002. Seventy-two patients underwent anterior resection for low rectal carcinoma, 30 an ileoanal pouch for ulcerative colitis and 25 for miscellaneous conditions. Fifty-nine pre-takedown complications occurred in 50 (39.4%) patients. The most common were dermatitis (12.6%) and erythema (7.1%). The most severe were dehydration in 1 patient and stomal prolapse in 4 patients. Closure was associated with a complication rate of 33.1% and a mortality rate of 0.9%. Wound infection occurred in 18.3% and small bowel obstruction in 4.6%. Anastomotic leak requiring reanastomosis occurred in 2.8% and enterocutaneous fistula treated conservatively in 5.5%. There were no statistically significant differences in morbidity between closure techniques (p = 0.892). There were no statistically significant differences in complications (p = 0.516) between patients with ulcerative colitis and those with neoplasia (39.29% vs. 32.2%). Conclusions: Loop ileostomy construction and takedown is associated with considerable morbidity, mostly minor. No differences exist between technique used for closure or the baseline pathology of the patient.
Colorectal Disease | 2001
Eduardo García-Granero; R. Martí‐Obiol; J. Gómez‐Barbadillo; Juan García-Armengol; Pedro Esclapez; Alejandro Espí; E. Jiménez; Monica Millan; Salvador Lledó
The present study was designed to assess the differences in the outcome of patients with rectal cancer treated by a group of surgeons before and after being organized as a Coloproctology Unit at the same University Department of Surgery.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1998
Eduardo García-Granero; A. Sanahuja; Juan García-Armengol; E. Jiménez; Pedro Esclapez; Miguel Minguez; Alejandro Espí; F. López; Salvador Lledó
PURPOSE: The present study was undertaken to evaluate anal endosonographic results of the transverse and longitudinal extent of internal anal sphincter division after closed lateral subcutaneous sphincterotomy and its relationship to outcome with respect to anal fissure recurrence and postoperative anal incontinence. METHODS: Ten patients selected for symptomatic anal fissure recurrence (mean follow-up, 10.9 months) and 41 asymptomatic control patients (mean follow-up, 15.5 months) were reviewed by anal endosonography after closed lateral subcutaneous sphincterotomy. Clinical evaluation was focused on anal fissure recurrence and postoperative anal incontinence. The anal endosonographic study involves serial radial images of the distal, proximal, and midanal canal. RESULTS: In 32 patients in whom a complete internal sphincter defect was identified, 31 (75.6 percent) were from the control group and only 1 patient (10 percent) was from the recurrence group (P<0.001). In 19 patients, an incomplete internal sphincter defect was identified; 10 (24.4 percent) were from the control group (residual median size, 1.8 mm; contralateral, 2.5 mm) and 9 patients (90 percent) were from the recurrence group (P=0.001; residual median size, 1.4 mm; contralateral, 2.2 mm). Ten patients (19.6 percent) were incontinent for gas and three patients (5.9 percent) for liquid feces, without significant differences between groups. CONCLUSIONS: Anal endosonography is a useful method for evaluating the anatomic effectiveness of closed lateral subcutaneous sphincterotomy. An incomplete sphincterotomy is associated with significant symptomatic anal fissure recurrence.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1996
Alejandro Espí; Javier Arenas; Eduardo García-Granero; Elena Martí; Salvador Lledó
PURPOSE: Aim of this study has been to evaluate natural killer (NK) activity in patients with colorectal tumors before and after curative surgery. METHODS: Forty colorectal cancer patients without distant metastases were stratified according to American Joint Committee on Cancer/International Union Against Cancer staging system into three categories: Stage I (n = 12), Stage II (n = 15), and Stage III (n = 13). All of them underwent curative resection, and there were no major postoperative complications. Venous blood samples were obtained preoperatively, at surgical wound closure, and on the 1st, 7th, and 21st postoperative days. Mononuclear cells were isolated over Ficoll-Hypaque™(Lymphoprep, Nycomed Pharma AS, Oslo, Norway) gradients, and NK activity was assayed by evaluation of cytotoxic response against K562 cells. Normal NK activity was achieved from 15 healthy donors. Percentage relative increments in relation to preoperative levels were calculated for every postoperative sample, andt-test was used for statistical evaluation. RESULTS: Before surgery, Stages II and III patients had lower levels of NK activity than healthy people(P< 0.05 andP< 0.001, respectively). NK activity always fell after surgery (Stage I: -18.48±11.42; Stage II: −16.93±13.57; Stage III: −35.29±12.03, at day 1 postsurgery) and appeared to rise slightly by the 21st postoperative day in Stage I patients (+4.87±12.41). Stage II, and especially Stage III, patients did show a significant recovery by the 21st postoperative day (+23.63±9.36 and +43.19±13.34, respectively). At this time, NK activity in these two groups was not significantly lower than in normal subjects(P> 0.05). CONCLUSION: NK activity is depressed in colorectal cancer patients in relation to progression of illness, even at locoregional stages. Curative resection of tumors at Stages II and III has promoted a recovery of NK activity in patients with uneventful postoperative courses.
Colorectal Disease | 2016
Franco G. Marinello; Gloria Baguena; Elí Lucas; Matteo Frasson; David Hervás; Blas Flor-Lorente; Pedro Esclapez; Alejandro Espí; Eduardo García-Granero
Anastomotic leakage is one of the most feared complications after colonic resection. Many risk factors for anastomotic leakage have been reported, but the impact of an individual surgeon as a risk factor has scarcely been reported. The aim of this study was to assess if the individual surgeon is an independent risk factor for anastomotic leakage in colonic cancer surgery.
Colorectal Disease | 2006
Monica Millan; Eduardo García-Granero; Pedro Esclapez; Blas Flor-Lorente; Alejandro Espí; Salvador Lledó
Objective Intersphincteric abscesses are relatively rare, and in some cases of upward extensions in the supralevator plane, can be difficult to manage. The aim of this study was to analyse the type of treatment used in these abscesses.
Colorectal Disease | 2009
Eduardo García-Granero; A. Sanahuja; Stephanie García-Botello; Omar Faiz; Pedro Esclapez; Alejandro Espí; B. Flor; Miguel Minguez; Salvador Lledó
Objective To evaluate the relationship between extent of internal sphincter division following open and closed sphincterotomy, as assessed by anal endosonography, with fissure persistence/recurrence and faecal incontinence.
Surgery | 2017
Eduardo García-Granero; Francisco Navarro; Carlos Cerdán Santacruz; Matteo Frasson; Alvaro Garcia-Granero; Franco G. Marinello; Blas Flor-Lorente; Alejandro Espí
Background. Our aim was to assess whether the individual surgeon is an independent risk factor for anastomotic leak in double‐stapled colorectal anastomosis after left colon and rectal cancer resection. Methods. This retrospective analysis of a prospectively collected database consists of a consecutive series of 800 patients who underwent an elective left colon and rectal resection with a colorectal, double‐stapled anastomosis between 1993 and 2009 in a specialized colorectal unit of a tertiary hospital with 7 participating surgeons. The main outcome variable was anastomotic leak, defined as leak of luminal contents from a colorectal anastomosis between 2 hollow viscera diagnosed radiologically, clinically, endoscopically, or intraoperatively. Pelvic abscesses were also considered to be an anastomotic leak. Radiologic examination was performed when there was clinical suspicion of leak. Results. Anastomotic leak occurred in 6.1% of patients, of which 33 (67%) were treated operatively, 6 (12%) with radiologic drains, and 10 (21%) by medical treatment. Postoperative mortality rate was 2.9% for the whole group of 800 patients. In patients with anastomotic leak, mortality rate increased up to 16% vs 2.0% in patients without anastomotic leak (P < .0001). At multivariate analysis, rectal location of tumor, male sex, bowel obstruction preoperatively, tobacco use, diabetes, perioperative transfusion, and the individual surgeon were independent risk factors for anastomotic leak. The surgeon was the most important factor (mean odds ratio 4.9; range 1.0 to 13.5). The variance of anastomotic leak between the different surgeons was 0.56 in the logit scale. Conclusion. The individual surgeon is an independent risk factor for leakage in double‐stapled, colorectal, end‐to‐end anastomosis after oncologic left‐sided colorectal resection.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2000
Eduardo García-Granero; Pedro Esclapez; Juan García-Armengol; Alejandro Espí; José Planelles; Monica Millan; Salvador Lledó
Several methods have been used to detect and evaluate small-bowel strictures in Crohns disease. We describe a simple technique for the calibration of strictures using a 2.5-cm medical plastic sphere. This method provides an aseptic, safe, and effective calibration of the entire small bowel.