Skip to content
J Pouch support charity | Red Lion Group
  • Home
  • About
  • What’s New
  • Resources
  • FORUM
  • Events
  • Contact
  • FAQS
  • MEDIC
  • YouTube
  • Search
Events

Ileo-anal Surgery – A Guide for Patients


Ileo-anal Surgery for Ulcerative Colitis – A Guide for Patients

Republished 11 April 2022

Zarah Perry-Woodford

Stop Press – Zarah Perry-Woodford will be participating in the Moderated Q&A session on Pouch Care at the Red Lion Group Internal Pouch Information day at Central Middlesex Hospital on Saturday, 14th May 2022.

In 2016, St Mark’s Hospital Academic Institute proudly announced its first ever book publication “Ileo-Anal Pouch Surgery for Ulcerative Colitis – A Guide for Patients”, written by Zarah Perry-Woodford, lead nurse – pouch and stoma care, St Mark’s Hospital.

Zarah has worked at St Mark’s hospital since 2002 and as the lead pouch nurse and practitioner since 2005 providing expert care to patients with ileo-anal pouches.

The book is an invaluable resource for people living with or considering an internal (Ileo-anal) pouch or J-Pouch. You can find out more about the book and how to purchase by clicking on the image below.

The Red Lion Pouch Support Group is delighted to announce that Zarah will be participating in the Moderated Q&A session on pouch care at its Internal Pouch Information Day to be hosted at Central Middlesex Hospital on Saturday, 14th May 2022.

You can find out more about the Information Day and reserve your place by clicking here.

Register your place soon as places are limited!

Stories

Video: Considering a J-Pouch? What you need to know.

Mr Toby Hammond talks about J-Pouch Surgery – Recovery Time, Risks and Benefits

New committee member Michelle Martin has made the first of a series of videos about the pouch featuring her own surgeon Mr Toby Hammond as the presenter.

The idea for the series was prompted by Michelle’s experiences of ulcerative colitis and what exactly made her decide to go ahead with J-pouch surgery.

Says Michelle: “In 2017 I had an emergency operation to remove my colon due to undiagnosed ulcerated colitis. It was a total shock. Suddenly I was living with a stoma and everything in my life had changed. 

“Initially, my main focus was to have my stoma reversed, however over time I got used to my stoma, I felt well for the first time in years and I didn’t want any more operations.”

However, she wanted to find out more about the second option – having an ileo-anal pouch fitted. “I spent a lot of time talking through my options with my consultant Mr Hammond [Toby Hammond, consultant general and colorectal surgeon at Broomfield Hospital, Essex], but I found that away from the hospital there was limited information that would help me make an informed decision. 

“I eventually decided to go ahead with the operation and just over a year later I couldn’t be happier,” says Michelle. 

As she points out: “I know deciding to go ahead with the operation is a difficult decision, and I wanted to help others in a similar situation. I approached Mr Hammond and he was more than happy to support the project, and I hope this will be the first of many videos that will help people living with a J-pouch.”

You can view the video on YouTube below.

The Red Lion Group would like to thank Mr Toby Hammond and Graham Fisher, cameraman and editor, for both giving up their time for free and helping to produce this informative film.

If you would like to become a member of the Red Lion Group, you can sign up by clicking on the button below.

Join Now
News

March of the medical robots

March of the medical robots

Keyhole – or laparoscopic – surgery has been the buzz-phrase in cutting-edge surgery – if you’ll excuse the pun. Until recently. Today robots are giving surgeons a speedier, more efficient way to perform pouch operations, reports Christopher Browne.

Danilo Miskovic, St Mark’s Hospital’s lead robotic surgeon

If you want to liven up a dull dinner party or even a high-level business meeting – and who doesn’t! – mention robots. Once coveted by filmmakers and sci-fi lovers, the march of the robots is revolutionizing our approach to almost everything from domestic chores to high-end technology. 

And, hold on a minute, there have been rumors spreading through the hospital wards at St Mark’s about a group of surgeons and a …… robot! It’s just robotic gossip you might say, but you’d be wrong for it’s all true.

For almost two years now a team led by Professor Omar Faiz, St Mark’s Hospital’s clinical director, has been pioneering a research programme into robot technology, financially backed by a St Mark’s Hospital Foundation fundraising campaign.

The campaign funded the capital costs of the purchase of a Da Vinci Xi surgical robot – the most advanced of its kind in the world – in March 2018. Just a month after the robot’s delivery, a group of St Mark’s surgeons performed the hospital’s first robotic operation on a bowel cancer patient.

As the UK’s first hospital to use robot technology almost exclusively for bowel surgery, St Mark’s has carried out 180 plus robotic operations on mainly bowel-related cases. “We set ourselves the goal to perform 80 robotic colorectal operations in our first year and we easily exceeded this target. One of the cases was particularly unique: it involved two surgeons operating robotically on both a patient’s bowel and liver during the same operation,” said Jason Bacon, CEO of St Mark’s Hospital Foundation. 

Another “first” occurred In August this year when a team of four surgeons, including Mr Danilo Miskovic, St Mark’s lead robotic surgeon, carried out a 12-hour pelvic exenteration [an operation to remove multiple organs in the pelvis] on a young father with cancer which had been caused by complications with ulcerative colitis. 

Two months later, a team headed by Prof Faiz and Mr Miskovic, performed the first-ever robotic ileoanal pouch surgery on a St Mark’s patient.

“We believe the introduction of robotic surgery is an important milestone in reducing the risk of recurrent disease, and provides patients with a good short- and long-term quality of life. Similar to laparoscopic surgery, it is minimally invasive but it also provides the surgeon with magnified, high-definition 3d images to enable extremely precise surgery,” said Mr Bacon.

“While robotics has been established in other surgical specialties, namely urology and gynecology, its application has not until recently been widely researched and implemented for bowel disease surgery.”

Since the robotic surgical programme began, St Mark’s bowel cancer surgeons have been training to use the robotic surgical tool, while a fellowship in robotic surgery, funded by Intuitive Surgical, supplier of the Da Vinci Xi robot, will train more surgeons in the next three years.

Operation robot: a St Mark’s team carry out robot-assisted surgery

This article first appeared in ISSUE 58: Christmas 2019 edition of ROAR!

If you would like to read other articles like this, why not become a member of the Red Lion Pouch Support Group? You will receive printed copy of ROAR! twice a year and have online access to archive ROAR! editions going back to 1994.

Join Now

Search Resources

Filter Resources

Roar

All Videos

--Information Day 2015

--Information Day 2017

--Information Day 2018

--Information Day 2019

--Zoom 2020

--Zoom 2021

--Zoom 2022

--Zoom 2023

--Zoom 2024

RSS News from St. Mark’s Foundation

  • Thank you for caring with guts!
  • Caring with Guts since 1835
  • November Updates from SMHF
  • October Updates from SMHF
  • September Updates from SMHF
  • August e-newsletter
  • Spring Updates
  • May Updates from SMHF
  • April is Bowel Cancer Awareness Month
  • Bowel Cancer Survivor is walking Lands End to John O’Groats in aid of St Mark’s

Recent Posts

  • Back to peak fitness after J Pouch surgery
  • J-Pouch anal and vaginal fistula study update
  • Wear your Red Lion Group T-Shirt with Pride!
  • Top 10 most viewed J Pouch posts on pouchsupport.org
  • Join St. Mark’s Study: Help Shape a Sexual Function Questionnaire
Privacy | Sitemap
The Red Lion Group is a UK registered charity number 1068124

© Copyright [wpsos_year] The Red Lion Group. All Rights Reserved.

Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress
  • Facebook
  • twitter
  • YouTube
 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.