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1 .6% at 10 years, and 28.3% at 20 years after intestinal resection.
2 h Crohn's disease (CD) eventually require an intestinal resection.
3 PV values to monitor for CD recurrence after intestinal resection.
4 d risk of intestinal failure after extensive intestinal resection.
5 surgical recurrence of Crohn's disease after intestinal resection.
6        Crohn's disease commonly recurs after intestinal resection.
7 helium and for regulation of the response to intestinal resection.
8 g in irreversible bowel injury that requires intestinal resection.
9 ts to promote bowel absorption after massive intestinal resection.
10 tients with Crohn's disease (CD), leading to intestinal resection.
11 agnosis of Crohn's disease and had undergone intestinal resection.
12 pithelial damage and IL-8 secretion in human intestinal resections.
13 d fluid administration practices during 8404 intestinal resections, 22,854 hysterectomies, and 1471 a
14 usted pLOS than lowest balance hospitals for intestinal resection (6.5 vs 5.7 d, P < 0.001) and hyste
15 f the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, including intestinal resection and anastomosis, lead to motility d
16 ng the loss of motility in a murine model of intestinal resection and to follow-up the recovery of in
17 effect of these advances on the necessity of intestinal resections and the risk of re-resection is un
18              The specific ileal responses to intestinal resection are dependent on the extent of rese
19   Most patients with Crohn's disease need an intestinal resection, but a majority will subsequently e
20 th Crohn's disease were at increased risk of intestinal resection compared to never smokers (HR 1.27,
21   One hundred sixty-four patients undergoing intestinal resection for Crohns disease at The Mount Sin
22 have been varying reports of mortality after intestinal resection for the inflammatory bowel diseases
23 val without intestinal resection (hereafter, intestinal resection-free [IRF] survival) could help in
24 ing factors associated with survival without intestinal resection (hereafter, intestinal resection-fr
25 he objective is to compare primary repair vs intestinal resection in cases of intestinal typhoid perf
26                   The primary indication for intestinal resection in Crohn's disease is fibrostenotic
27 enced cells and adaptive proliferation after intestinal resection in p21(waf1/cip1)-null mice.
28 s to determine postoperative mortality after intestinal resection in patients with IBD.
29 y was high after emergent, but not elective, intestinal resection in patients with UC or CD.
30 eostasis and the adaptive response following intestinal resection in the adult intestine.
31 nding protein, were studied before and after intestinal resection in the rat.
32 tients with Crohn's disease require surgical intestinal resections in their lifetime.
33 e incidence of and risk factors for surgery (intestinal resection) in pediatric patients with Crohn's
34       The most feared complication following intestinal resection is anastomotic leakage.
35                          Eighty-five percent intestinal resection led to ileal hypertrophy and a spec
36                               Full-thickness intestinal resection material from pediatric controls an
37                           Patients surviving intestinal resection may develop short gut syndrome.
38 tres in Australia and New Zealand undergoing intestinal resection of all macroscopic Crohn's disease,
39 gical margin width on recurrence rates after intestinal resection of Crohn's Disease (CD).
40 isolated EGCs from male Sprague-Dawley rats, intestinal resections of 6 patients with CD, and uninfla
41 ption or flare, escalation, hospitalization, intestinal resection, or death were assessed during 6.5
42                            Following massive intestinal resection, patients frequently sustain severe
43    Crohn's disease (CD) usually recurs after intestinal resection; postoperative endoscopic monitorin
44                                   The annual intestinal resection rate decreased nonlinearly from 22.
45                      Over the past 25 years, intestinal resection rate has decreased significantly fo
46 d response to treatment, increased length of intestinal resection, shorter time to repeat surgery, an
47  (UC=38% vs 38%; CD=45% vs 42%) among 15,837 intestinal resections (UC=5,297; CD=10,540).
48 -existing obesity on lean mass after massive intestinal resection was not demonstrated.
49                              Extensive small intestinal resection was the major predictor for liver f
50 ients (3293/4879 male/female) in whom 10,315 intestinal resections were performed.
51      Ninety patients (55%) underwent initial intestinal resection whereas 74 patients (45%) underwent
52 tial laparotomy: primary repair (Group A) or intestinal resection with anastomosis (Group B).
53   75 had primary repair (Group A) and 26 had intestinal resection with anastomosis (Group B).
54 to 60% of patients with Crohn's disease need intestinal resection within the first 10 years of diagno