Sixteen patients with ileal pouch outlet mechanical obstruction had ma
jor abdominal revision of the ileoanal anastomosis. Before operation a
ll had severe difficulty in evacuation which required catheterization
in 11. Eleven patients had a long efferent limb and/or long anorectal
cuff, and five had a persistent stricture at the ileoanal anastomosis,
None had pouchitis, The pouch was fully mobilized abdominally and the
obstructing lesion resected, A new handsewn ileoanal anastomosis was
formed. In two cases pouch volume was increased by incorporating an ad
ditional loop of ileum, All anastomoses but one were covered by a loop
ileostomy, There were no deaths. Major complications occurred in two
patients. Function was assessed in 15 patients; in one the ileostomy h
ad not been closed, Median (interquartile range) frequency of defaecat
ion per 24 h fell from 15 (7.3-19.5) to 6 (4.5-6.0) (P= 0.0033). Of th
e 11 patients who required a catheter before operation six evacuated s
pontaneously, three were improved but intubated on some occasions and
two were unchanged after revisional surgery. Of the ten incontinent pa
tients, five became continent, four were improved and one remained unc
hanged, There was a new continence disturbance in four (minor nocturna
l in three) of the remaining five patients, One patient underwent furt
her abdominal salvage surgery and another required establishment of an
ileostomy because of poor function. Combined abdominoanal salvage sur
gery for outlet mechanical obstruction was successful in averting an i
leostomy in 13 of 16 patients, and significantly improved pouch functi
on in 12 of 15.