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Chronic pains after right hemicolectomy

Colorectal Cancer | Last Active: Oct 14 9:37am | Replies (21)

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@hallo643

They don't necessarily remove the ileocecal valve ( that's the valve you're referring to, between the terminal ileum and the caecum if it's not damaged or close to the malignant growths in your colon for which they are doing the surgery. I had a hemicolectomy three years ago ( for a stage II adenocarcinoma on the right side of my colon near the hepatic junction). They removed my caecum ( not the ileocecal valve), ascending colon and as much of the transverse colon as needed to get good cancer-free margins from the cancer. It was an endoscopic surgery and I recovered well, with GI function within a normal range at this point. I do take probiotics, but never needed any antibiotics after the surgery.

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Replies to "@hallo643 They don't necessarily remove the ileocecal valve ( that's the valve you're referring to, between..."

@marybird Pretty much all right hemicolectomies remove the valve. It has something to do with the a vein or something that runs along there. If you had a small tumor in the cecum, that is actually not a right hemicolectomy but rather a cecum resection. A proper right hemicolectomy removes part of the terminal ileum (including the valve), the cecum, and the ascending colon.