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Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Update Course 2015

Video Published 2019-01-11 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Surgical management discussion of pediatric IBD covering two cases: Crohn's disease with terminal ileum stricture requiring laparoscopic resection, and refractory ulcerative colitis requiring colectomy with J-pouch. Panel debates timing of surgery with TNF inhibitors, anastomotic complications, and fertility concerns in female patients.

Key Takeaways

  • In Crohn's with ureteral involvement, consider laparoscopic resection with lighted ureteral stent for safe identification and protection.
  • Hold TNF inhibitors 2-4 weeks preoperatively when possible; wound complications are the primary concern, not necessarily anastomotic leak.
  • For ulcerative colitis requiring colectomy, single-stage J-pouch is feasible if tissue quality is excellent and anastomosis is tension-free.
  • Counsel female UC patients preoperatively about infertility risk up to 60% after IPAA, though laparoscopic approach may reduce pelvic scarring.
  • Operate for IBD when medical therapy complications (growth failure, steroid toxicity, transfusion dependence) outweigh disease control benefits.

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