Ekkehard C. Jehle
University of Tübingen
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Featured researches published by Ekkehard C. Jehle.
Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2000
Tilman T. Zittel; Ekkehard C. Jehle; Horst D. Becker
Abstract Aims: The current surgical management of peptic ulcer disease and its outcome have been reviewed. Results: Today, surgery for peptic ulcer disease is largely restricted to the treatment of complications. In peptic ulcer perforation, a conservative treatment trial can be given in selected cases. If laparotomy is necessary, simple closure is sufficient in the large majority of cases, and definitive ulcer surgery to reduce gastric acid secretion is no longer justified in these patients. Laparoscopic surgery for perforated peptic ulcer has failed to prove to be a significant advantage over open surgery. In bleeding peptic ulcers, definitive hemostasis can be achieved by endoscopic treatment in more than 90% of cases. In 1–2% of cases, immediate emergency surgery is necessary. Some ulcers have a high risk of re-bleeding, and early elective surgery might be advisable. Surgical bleeding control can be achieved by direct suture and extraluminal ligation of the gastroduodenal artery or by gastric resection. Benign gastric outlet obstruction can be controlled by endoscopic balloon dilatation in 70% of cases, but gastrojejunostomy or gastric resection are necessary in about 30% of cases. Conclusions: Elective surgery for peptic ulcer disease has been largely abandoned, and bleeding or obstructing ulcers can be managed safely by endoscopic treatment in most cases. However, surgeons will continue to encounter patients with peptic ulcer disease for emergency surgery. Currently, laparoscopic surgery has no proven advantage in peptic ulcer surgery.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1997
Frank Makowiec; Ekkehard C. Jehle; Horst D. Becker; Michael J. Starlinger
PURPOSE: Perianal disease is frequent in patients with Crohns disease, and many of these patients will eventually have abscess formation. In a prospective follow-up study, we evaluated factors influencing the occurrence and recurrence of perianal abscesses. METHODS: Of 126 consecutive patients with perianal Crohns disease seen regularly in an outpatient clinic, 61 (48.4 percent) had at least one perianal abscess (mean follow-up, 32±17 months). In all, 110 episodes of an abscess with 145 anatomically distinct abscesses were documented. RESULTS: The occurrence of first abscesses was dependent on the type of anal fistula (ischiorectal, 73 percent; transsphincteric, 50 percent; superficial, 25 percent;P< 0.02). Surgical therapy consisted of seton drainage (34 percent), mushroom catheter drainage (49 percent), or incision and drainage (29 percent) and led to inactivation in all patients. Cumulative two-year recurrence rates after the first and second abscess were 54 and 62 percent, respectively. Abscess recurrence was less frequent in patients with a stoma (13vs.60 percent in patients without stoma after two years) and in patients with superficial anal fistulas (0vs.55 percent/56 percent in patients with transsphincteric/ischiorectal fistulas). Only two abscesses recurred within one year after removal of seton drainage, whereas 13 abscesses recurred with the seton still in place. Neither intestinal nor rectal activity of Crohns disease significantly influenced the occurrence of an abscess. During the study period, only two patients developed partial stool incontinence. CONCLUSION: Development of perianal abscesses in Crohns disease depends on the fecal stream and the anatomic type of anal fistula. Seton and catheter drainage are safe and highly effective in treatment. Long-term use of setons to prevent recurrent abscesses is not supported by our data.
Brain Research | 1999
Tilman T. Zittel; Jörg Glatzle; Martin E. Kreis; Michael J. Starlinger; M Eichner; Helen E. Raybould; Horst D. Becker; Ekkehard C. Jehle
C-fos protein expression was investigated in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) in response to increasing cholecystokinin (CCK) doses and food intake in rats by counting the number of c-fos protein positive cells in the NTS. C-fos protein expression in the NTS dose-dependently increased in response to CCK, the lowest effective dose being 0.1 microg/kg. The ED(50) for c-fos protein expression in the NTS in response to CCK was calculated to be 0.5 to 1.8 microg/kg, depending on the anatomical level of the NTS investigated. Food intake increased c-fos protein expression in the NTS, the maximum number of c-fos protein positive cells being reached at 90 min after the start of food intake. Regression analysis identified a positive correlation between c-fos protein expression and the amount of food intake. Our data indicate that subpopulations of the NTS that are activated by CCK or food intake are involved into the short-term regulation of food intake and the neural control of feeding by the caudal brainstem.
American Journal of Surgery | 1995
Ekkehard C. Jehle; Torsten Haehnel; Michael J. Starlinger; Horst D. Becker
Anorectal function was studied in 55 patients undergoing low anterior resection for rectal adenocarcinoma. Patients were examined preoperatively and 3 months postoperatively by anorectal manometry and standardized interview. Postoperatively, the patients showed, in general, an impairment of anorectal functions. After 3 months, continence for flatus was defective, the ability to discriminate flatus from feces, and the ability to defer defecation were compromised. Stool frequency was elevated, and anal resting pressure, squeeze pressure, and rectal compliance were decreased. The rectoanal inhibitory reflex was abolished in all patients. However, the two groups with the level of the anastomosis less than or equal to 6 cm (n = 27, range 3 to 6) and more than 6 cm (n = 28, range 7 to 10) above the anal verge showed no differences in manometric values, stool frequency, or fecal continence assessed by the interview. No correlation was found between the level of the anastomosis and manometric values and between the level of the anastomosis and stool frequency (regression analysis = not significant). We concluded that anorectal function after anterior resection and low colorectal anastomosis are not influenced by the remaining length of the rectum but by the surgical trauma to the sphincter and its innervation.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1996
Martin E. Kreis; Ekkehard C. Jehle; Volker Haug; K. Manncke; Gerd F. Buess; Horst D. Becker; Michael J. Starlinger
PURPOSE: Compared with traditional operations, superior results after transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM) for rectal tumors have been demonstrated in terms of morbidity and mortality. However, no data were available on functional outcome after TEM. We, therefore, studied 42 patients who were undergoing TEM. METHODS: Patients were examined by anorectal manometry and participated in a standardized interview preoperatively and three months and one year after surgery. RESULTS: Anorectal function as assessed by manometry was impaired three months after surgery but improved again during the first postoperative year. In parallel, some patients complained of impaired continence or defecation disorders in the interview three months postoperatively. These functions improved during the first year after surgery, too. CONCLUSIONS: Correct comparison of our results with functional outcome after anterior rectal resection is impossible. We feel, however, that functional results after TEM are likely to be superior to those after anterior resection for rectal tumors.
European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2005
Mario H. Mueller; Jörg Glatzle; M. S. Kasparek; Horst D. Becker; Ekkehard C. Jehle; Tilman T. Zittel; Martin E. Kreis
Introduction The indication for surgery after conservative treatment of acute diverticulitis is still under debate. This is partly as a result of limited data on the outcome of conservative management in the long run. We therefore aimed to determine the long-term results of conservative treatment for acute diverticulitis. Methods The records of all patients treated at our institution for diverticulitis between 1985 and 1991 were reviewed (n=363, median age 64 years, range 29–93). Patients who received conservative treatment were interviewed in 1996 and 2002 [follow-up time 7 years 2 months (range 58–127 months) and 13 years 4 months (range 130–196 months). Results A total of 252 patients (69%) were treated conservatively, whereas 111 (31%) were operated on. At the first follow-up, 85 patients treated conservatively had died, one of them from bleeding diverticula. A recurrence of symptoms was reported by 78 of the remaining 167 patients, and 13 underwent sugery. At the second follow-up, one patient had died from sepsis after perforation during another episode of diverticulitis. Thirty-one of the 85 patients interviewed reported symptoms and 12 had been operated on. In summary, at the second follow-up interview, 34% of patients treated initially had had a recurrence and 10% had undergone surgery. No predictive factors for the recurrence of symptoms or later surgery could be determined. Conclusion Despite a high rate of recurrences after conservative treatment of acute diverticulitis, lethal complications are rare. Surgery should thus mainly be undertaken to achieve relief of symptoms rather than to prevent death from complications.
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2000
Tilman T. Zittel; K. Manncke; Stefan Haug; Joachim F. Schäfer; Martin E. Kreis; Horst D. Becker; Ekkehard C. Jehle
We investigated the functional results after laparoscopic rectopexy for rectal prolapse in 29 patients at least 12 months postoperatively. Twenty patients were evaluated completely pre- and postoperatively (median 22 months postoperatively, range 12 to 54 months). Six patients were interviewed by telephone, two patients were lost to follow-up, and one patient died of causes unrelated to rectal prolapse. Patients underwent a proctologic examination, anoscopy, rigid sigmoidoscopy, fluoroscopic defecography, and anorectal manometry pre- and postoperatively, and an additional standardized interview postoperatively. Anorectal manometry showed a significant increase in maximum anal resting and squeeze pressures postoperatively (resting pressure 72 ±8 vs. 95 ±13 mm Hg, pre- vs. postoperatively; P = 0.046; squeeze pressure 105 ±17 vs. 142 ±19 mm Hg, pre- vs. postoperatively; P = 0.035), and continence improved postoperatively (Wexner incontinence score 6.0 ±1.0 vs. 3.9 ± 0.8 pre- vs. postoperatively, P = 0.02). Twenty (77%) of 26 patients were satisfied with the operative result, but functional morbidity was observed in four patients, with two patients complaining of severe evacuation problems. Rectal prolapse recurred in one patient 42 months postoperatively (recurrence rate 1 [3.8%] of 26 patients). Functional results were very similar to those obtained after open rectopexy, with symptoms of prolapse and incontinence improved in the great majority of patients.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2000
Andreas Huge; Martin E. Kreis; Tilman T. Zittel; Horst D. Becker; Michael J. Starlinger; Ekkehard C. Jehle
PURPOSE: Colonic motility is crucial for the resolution of postoperative ileus. However, few data are available on postoperative colonic motility and no data on postoperative colonic tone. We aimed to characterize postoperative colonic tone and motility in patients. METHODS: Nineteen patients were investigated with combined barostat and manometry recordings after left colonic surgery. During surgery a combined recording catheter was placed in the colon with two barostat bags and four manometry channels cephalad to the anastomosis. Recordings were performed twice daily from Day 1 to Day 3 after surgery. RESULTS: Manometry showed an increasing colonic motility index, which was a mean (± standard error of the mean) of 37±5 mmHg/minute on Day 1, 87±19 mmHg/minute on Day 2, and 102±13 mmHg/minute on Day 3 (P<0.05 for Day 1vs. Day 2 and Day 2vs. Day 3). Low barostat bag volumes indicating a high colonic tone were observed on Day 1 after surgery and increased subsequently (barostat bag I was 19±4, 32±6, and 32±6 ml; barostat bag II was 13±1, 19±3, and 22±5 ml on Days 1, 2, and 3, respectively; for both barostat bagsP<0.05 for Day 1vs. Day 2 but not Day 2vs. Day 3). CONCLUSIONS: Colonic motility increased during the postoperative course. The low barostat bag volumes indicated a high colonic tone postoperatively which would correspond to a contracted rather than to a distended colon. High colonic tone postoperatively may be relevant for pharmacologic treatment of postoperative ileus.
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2006
Volker Teichgräber; C. Aubé; Diethard Schmidt; Ekkehard C. Jehle; Claudius König; Claus D. Claussen; Philippe L. Pereira
OBJECTIVE Radiofrequency ablation is emerging as a therapeutic technique for the treatment of an increasing variety of tumors. Exact visual guidance to the tumor and controlled delivery of energy is pivotal for ablation success. CONCLUSION Introducing MRI as a guidance technique ideally uses tumor-specific tissue characteristics, allows direct multiplanar reconstruction for precise needle positioning, and permits real-time monitoring and assessment of treatment-induced tissue signal changes to increase the safety of the procedure.
Annals of Surgery | 2002
Tilman T. Zittel; Jörg Glatzle; Mario H. Müller; Martin E. Kreis; Helen E. Raybould; Horst D. Becker; Ekkehard C. Jehle
ObjectiveTo investigate the central regulation of food intake by quantifying neuron activation of the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) after injection of cholecystokinin (CCK) or food intake in gastrectomized rats. Summary Background DataTotal gastrectomy is followed by early satiety, low calorie intake, and weight loss in the majority of patients. The etiology of these effects is unknown. Sixty percent to 70% of patients remain underweight after total gastrectomy, the weight loss averaging 25% of preoperative body weight. About two thirds of gastrectomized patients report early satiety, and about 60% do not reach the recommended daily calorie intake. The NTS is a brain stem center involved in the regulation of food intake; thus, the extent and pattern of neuronal activation provide information on the process involved in the initiation of satiation and the regulation of food intake. MethodsThe authors investigated neuronal activation in the NTS using c-fos immunohistochemistry following CCK injection or food intake in healthy control rats, sham-operated control rats, age-matched control rats, weight-matched control rats, and vagotomized or gastrectomized rats. ResultsNeuronal activation in the NTS after CCK injection was significantly decreased 21 days after total gastrectomy, but increased by up to 51% 3 months and by up to 102% 12 months after surgery compared to age-matched unoperated control rats. Neuronal activation in the NTS in response to feeding was markedly increased up to fivefold in gastrectomized rats. This increase was early in onset and sustained, and occurred despite significantly reduced food intake. Administration of MK329, a CCK-A receptor antagonist, significantly reduced the number of postprandially activated neurons in both gastrectomized and control rats. ConclusionsThe early postprandial activation of NTS neurons after total gastrectomy in rats may correspond to early satiety reported by patients, while the sustained activation of NTS neurons after a meal could contribute to a reduced daily calorie intake. These data suggest that a disturbed central regulation of food intake might contribute to early satiety, reduced food intake, and weight loss after total gastrectomy.