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Dive into the research topics where Peter Stewart is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Stewart.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1997

Factors affecting survival after excision of the rectum for cancer: a multivariate analysis.

E. L. Bokey; P. H. Chapuis; Owen F. Dent; Ronald C. Newland; S. G. Koorey; P. Zelas; Peter Stewart

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to identify and categorize the independent prognostic effects of patient, clinical, operative, and pathology variables on long-term survival after anterior resection or abdominoperineal excision of the rectum for cancer. METHODS: Proportional hazards regression analysis was used to analyze prospective data from 709 patients who underwent surgery at Concord Hospital during a 23-year period. No patient received adjuvant therapy. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: After adjusting for age and clinicopathologic stage, significantly poorer survival was experienced by males, patients with extensive tumor adherent to other organ(s), those with a high-grade tumor or a tumor showing venous invasion, those who had a postoperative cardiovascular or respiratory complication, and those who did not undergo surgery by a colorectal surgeon specialist. The nature of the operation performed had no independent effect on survival.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1997

Are special investigations of value in the management of patients with fecal incontinence

J. P. Keating; Peter Stewart; Anthony A. Eyers; D. Warner; E. L. Bokey

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to determine whether special investigations significantly alter either the diagnosis or the management plan of patients with fecal incontinence assessed on the basis of a structured history and physical examination alone. METHODS: Fifty consecutive patients with fecal incontinence were prospectively studied in a tertiary referral clinic. Each patient was assessed by two clinicians who independently formulated a diagnosis and treatment plan based on the history and physical examination. The resulting 100 patient assessments were then compared with the final diagnosis and treatment plan formulated on completion of endoanal ultrasound, anal manometry, external sphincter electromyography, and defecating proctography. RESULTS: In the assessment of fecal incontinence, the addition of special investigations altered the diagnosis of the cause of incontinence based on history and examination alone in 19 percent of cases. The management plan was altered in 16 percent of cases. Special investigations were most useful in separating neuropathy from rectal wall disorders and in demonstrating the unexpected presence of internal sphincter defects and neuropathy. CONCLUSIONS: Even experienced colorectal surgeons will misdiagnose up to one-fifth of patients presenting with fecal incontinence if assessment is based on the history and physical examination alone. However surgically correctable causes of incontinence are rarely missed on clinical assessment.


British Journal of Surgery | 2005

Effect of supervised surgical training on outcomes after resection of colorectal cancer

A. A. Renwick; E. L. Bokey; P. H. Chapuis; P. Zelas; Peter Stewart; Matthew J. F. X. Rickard; Owen F. Dent

The process of training surgeons in technique for resection of colorectal cancer should not compromise patient care or outcomes. The aim of this study was to compare morbidity, mortality and survival rates after resection performed by trainees with those for a consultant surgeon.


Anz Journal of Surgery | 2010

Plugs unplugged. Anal fistula plug: the Concord experience

Gareth Owen; Anil Keshava; Peter Stewart; James Patterson; P. H. Chapuis; E. L. Bokey; Matthew J. F. X. Rickard

Purpose:  The purpose of this study was to analyse preliminary experience and outcomes with the Cook Surgisis AFP™ anal fistula plug (Cook Medical, Bloomington, IN, USA) with respect to the treatment of complex anal fistulae in a specialist colorectal unit.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2000

Biofeedback for fecal incontinence using transanal ultrasonography

Michael J. Solomon; Jenny Rex; Anthony A. Eyers; Peter Stewart; Rachael Roberts

PURPOSE: Neosphincter procedures may prove to be the treatment of choice for patients with neuropathic fecal incontinence but are rarely proposed for milder forms of the disease. Biofeedback may prove beneficial to these patients but is yet unproven. The objectives of this study were to develop a method of performing biofeedback using transanal ultrasound to teach the patient to contract repetitively and to determine biologic measures of sphincter function using transanal ultrasound in healthy and incontinent patients. METHODS: Initial uncontrolled studies were performed to determine the compliance, normal values, biologic measures of external sphincter strength (isotonic and isometric fatigue times), and early efficacy data using continence scores and visual analog scale scores. RESULTS: Forty-four patients were assessed during three months, with relative improvements in continence scores (St. Marks Hospital, 40 percent; Pescatori, 20 percent) and patient and investigator visual analog scale scores (38 percent for both) and measurable increase in biologic fatigue times measured by transanal ultrasound. CONCLUSIONS: Transanal ultrasound seems to be a method of teaching external sphincter contraction and measuring sphincter strength with good initial compliance. Clinically and statistically significant improvements in incontinence scores, visual analog scale scores, and biologic strength of the external sphincter were detected in the short-term follow-up with uncontrolled data. The randomized, controlled trial that we have begun will either confirm or refute these results.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1994

Total body nitrogen as a predictor of clinical status in anorexia nervosa

Janice Russell; Barry J. Allen; Michael Mira; Jeanette Vizzard; Peter Stewart; P. J. V. Beumont

It has been demonstrated that clinical outcome is positively correlated with depletion of total body nitrogen (TBN) and therefore of body protein in certain serious medical conditions such as cystic fibrosis or patients receiving dialysis for chronic renal failure. Patients with anorexia nervosa are not suffering from medical illness per se yet the illness can be chronic and severely debilitating requiring numerous hospitalizations for refeeding and/or management of medical complications. The prediction of chronicity remains an important and difficult issue that this study seeks to address by examining the correlation between several clinical indices in 18 patients suffering from anorexia nervosa with parameters of body composition, namely TBN and percentage body fat. TBN was measured using the technique of in vivo neutron-activation analysis (IVNAA) and expressed as nitrogen index. Percentage body fat was estimated using skinfold measurements. The highest correlation was between nitrogen index and number of hospitalizations (r = -.80). The data support a relationship between depletion of body nitrogen/protein and chronicity in anorexia nervosa.


Colorectal Disease | 2016

Long-term results following an anatomically based surgical technique for resection of colon cancer: a comparison with results from complete mesocolic excision

Les Bokey; P. H. Chapuis; Charles Chan; Peter Stewart; Matthew J. F. X. Rickard; Anil Keshava; Owen F. Dent

Complete mesocolic excision (CME) has been advocated as likely to improve the long‐term oncological outcome of colon cancer resection, although there is a paucity of long‐term results in the literature. The aim of this study was to supplement our previously published results on colon cancer resection based on a standardized technique of precise dissection along anatomical planes with high vascular ligation and to compare our long‐term results with those of recent European studies of CME.


Basic life sciences | 1993

Effect of Refeeding and Exercise in Restoration of Body Protein in Anorexia Nervosa

Janice Russell; Michael Mira; Barry J. Allen; Peter Stewart; Jeanette Vizzard; Brenden Arthur; P. J. V. Beumont

The degree of depletion of body nitrogen is related to clinical course and prognosis in serious medical conditions 1–6. These situations may be complicated by undernutrition and are characterized by the pathological process of the underlying disease. In anorexia nervosa, under-nutrition and the behaviors used to induce it represent the sole pathology, free of confounding variables. Hence body composition in this condition is of particular interest. Further, the direct measurement of total body nitrogen (TBN) by prompt neutron capture 1,2 permits the estimation of protein, possibly the most important body constituent unaffected by hydration which may be disordered in serious medical illness.


Anz Journal of Surgery | 2015

Complications after resection of colorectal cancer in a public hospital and a private hospital

Les Bokey; P. H. Chapuis; Anil Keshava; Matthew J. F. X. Rickard; Peter Stewart; Owen F. Dent

To our knowledge, immediate post‐operative complication rates after resection of colorectal cancer (CRC) have not been compared between public and private hospitals in the Australian health care system. We compared the frequency of surgical and medical complications between a public tertiary referral hospital and a private hospital.


Colorectal Disease | 2018

Recurrence and cancer-specific death after adjuvant chemotherapy for Stage III colon cancer

P. H. Chapuis; E. L. Bokey; Christopher L. Chan; Anil Keshava; Matthew J. F. X. Rickard; Peter Stewart; Christopher J. Young; Owen F. Dent

The recommended standard of care for patients after resection of Stage III colon cancer is adjuvant 5‐fluorouracil based chemotherapy – FOLFOX (fluorouracil, leucovorin with oxaliplatin) – or CAPOX (capecitabine, oxaliplatin). This may be modified in older patients or depending on comorbidity. This has been challenged recently as the apparent benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy may arise from improvements in surgery or preoperative imaging or pathology staging. This study compares recurrence and colon‐cancer‐specific death between patients who received postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy and those who did not.

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Anthony A. Eyers

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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Christopher J. Young

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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