Adhesion-related small-bowel obstruction after gynecologic
operations.
Al-Took S, Platt R, Tulandi T
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1999 Feb;180(2 Pt 1):313-5
Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, and Epidemiology and
Biostatistics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to evaluate a possible relationship between
adhesion-related small-bowel obstruction and gynecologic operations. STUDY
DESIGN: The records of all female patients with the diagnosis of small-bowel
obstruction from 1989 to 1996 were studied. The cause of bowel obstruction, the
type and technique of previous operations, and whether the parietal peritoneum
was closed at the completion of the procedure or was left open were evaluated.
RESULTS: Among 262 women the most common cause of small-bowel obstruction was
intra-abdominal adhesions (37.0%). Among 92 women with adhesion-related
small-bowel obstruction, 35 women (38%) had undergone a previous abdominal
hysterectomy. The incidence of small-bowel obstruction after an abdominal
hysterectomy was 16.3 per 1000 hysterectomies. The incidence of small-bowel
obstruction after cesarean delivery (5/10,000 cesarean deliveries) was
significantly less than after other abdominal operations. Adhesions were found
between the small bowel and the pelvis in 14 women (29.8%), and all were in
women who had undergone a hysterectomy. In 33 others (70.2%) the adhesions were
found between the previous abdominal incision and the intestine. The median
interval between the initial operation and the small-bowel obstruction was 5.3
years. CONCLUSION: The most common cause of small-bowel obstruction is
postsurgical adhesions. Adhesionrelated small-bowel obstruction is commonly
found after an abdominal hysterectomy. Bowel obstruction can occur many years
after the initial abdominal surgery.