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Query: UMLS:C0021843 (bowel obstruction)
9,927 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This article examines the effects of experimental prenatal intestinal obstruction on the growth and blood composition of chick embryos. Intestinal atresia (IA) was produced by bipolar bowel electrocoagulation in fertile eggs on the 14th day of incubation. The chicks killed on the 19th day were measured, weighed, and blood-sampled. Twenty-three control, 10 sham-operated, and 11 IA chicks were studied. Animals with IA were severely undernourished by weight (43.4 +/- 4.7 v 70.3 +/- 7.6% of egg weight, P < .001) and length (15.3 +/- 1.1 v 18.1 +/- 0.9 mm tibial length, P < .001) in comparison with sham-operated ones. Their hematocrit was slightly lower, and total protein increased. Prealbumin was absent in their sera and albumin, alpha and beta globulins were significantly decreased, whereas gamma-globulin was greatly increased. Sodium, potassium chloride, urea, and glucose remained within normal limits. The lack of placenta in the avian embryo precludes any supply of nutrients by this route and the ingestion of amniotic fluid, which is protein-rich after the 13th day of incubation, when the opening of the seroamniotic connection allows albumen to be mixed with it, becomes the main source of nutrients until hatching. Obstruction of the main incoming avenue by IA induces severe malnutrition in this model which relies on this route to a greater extent than the human fetus. In spite of the obvious biological differences between the avian embryo and the human fetus, the present evidence supports the hypothesis that prenatal interruption of the amniotic fluid transit contributes to fetal undergrowth in IA.
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PMID:The nutrition of the fetus with intestinal atresia: studies in the chick embryo model. 140 14

This paper examines the effects of experimental prenatal intestinal obstruction on the growth and blood composition of chick embryos. Intestinal atresia (IA) was produced by bipolar bowel electrocoagulation in fertile eggs on the 14th day of incubation. The chicks sacrificed on the 19th day were measured, weighed and blood-sampled. Twenty-three control, 10 sham-operated and 11 IA chicks were studied. Animals with IA were severely undernourished by weight (43.4 +/- 4.7 vs 70.3 +/- 7.6% of egg weight, p < 0.001) and length (15.3 +/- 1.1 vs 18.1 +/- 9 mm. tibial length, p < 0.001) in comparison with sham-operated ones. Their haematocrit was slightly lower, and total protein increased. Pre-albumin was absent in their sera and albumin, alpha and beta globulins were significantly decreased whereas gamma-globulin was greatly increased. Sodium, potassium chloride, urea and glucose remained within normal limits. The lack of placenta in the avian embryo precludes any supply of nutrients by this route and the ingestion of amniotic fluid, which is protein-rich after the 13th day of incubation, when the opening of the sero-amniotic connection allows albumen to be mixed with it, becomes the main source of nutrients until hatching. Obstruction of the main incoming avenue by IA induces severe malnutrition in this model which relies on this route to a greater extent than the human foetus. In spite of the obvious biological differences between the avian embryo and the human foetus, the present evidence supports the hypothesis that prenatal interruption of the amniotic fluid transit contributes to foetal undergrowth in IA.
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PMID:[Fetal nutrition in intestinal atresia. Studies on the chick embryo]. 821 10

Intestinal atresia accounts for about one third of all cases of neonatal intestinal obstruction. The survival rate has improved to 90% in most of the series with the operative mortality being < 1%. The survival rate improves with distal atresias. An increased mortality is observed in multiple atresias (57%), apple peel atresia (71%), and when atresia is associated with meconium ileus (65%), meconium peritonitis (50%) and gastroschisis (66%). Although appearance of echogenic bowel on prenatal ultrasonography is suggestive of GI, it is confirmed in only 27% cases. Prenatal ultrasonography is more reliable in detection of duodenal atresia than more distal lesions. Short bowel syndrome is the major impediment in the management of jejunoileal atresia. Although total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is the main adjunctive treatment, it delays intestinal adaptation and may cause cholestasia and subsequent liver damage. Graduated enteric feedings, use of growth hormone, glutamine and modified diets containing low fat, complex carbohydrates and protein supplements have been used in a adults with short bowel syndrome to successfully diminish TPN requirements and enhance nutrient absorption in nearly half of the patients. Utilization of growth factors to facilitate intestinal adaptation and advances in small bowel transplant may improve the long-term outcomes in future.
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PMID:Intestinal atresia. 1102 22

Over a 13-year period, 24 children with intestinal atresia were managed at the Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria. Intestinal atresia ranks as the second most common cause of neonatal intestinal obstruction (after anorectal malformation) in our hospital. Five children had duodenal obstruction (two atresia, two duodenal webs, one annular pancreas), 17 had jejunoileal atresia, and two had colonic atresia. Fourteen were boys, and 10 were girls (M:F: 1.17:1). The median age at presentation to the surgeon was 6 days (range: 1 day-12 years). The most common presenting features were bilious vomiting and abdominal distension. Six patients did not pass meconium within the first 24 h of birth. The median weight at presentation was 2.6 kg (range: 1.1 kg-5.0 kg). Seven patients (four with jejunoileal atresia and three with duodenal obstruction) had associated congenital anomalies. Diagnostic investigation was plain abdominal x-ray, showing double-bubble gas shadows in duodenal atresia and varying degrees of air-fluid levels in jejunoileal and colonic atresias. An upper gastrointestinal series was done in three patients and a barium enema in one. Retrocolic duodenojejunostomy was done for all patients with duodenal atresia and annular pancreas, duodenotomy and web excision for those with duodenal webs, and resection with end-to-end anastomosis for those with jejunoileal atresia. One child with atresia involving the whole ileum and the colon had a jejunorectal anastomosis, while the other child with colonic atresia had caecostomy followed later by ileorectal anastomosis. Ten neonates died, giving a mortality rate of 41.7%. Mortality from intestinal atresia is still high in our environment, due mainly to lack of neonatal intensive care facilities.
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PMID:Intestinal atresia: management problems in a developing country. 1513 87

Intestinal atresias are a common cause of newborn bowel obstruction (Dalla Vecchia LK, Grosfeld JL, West KW, et al, Intestinal atresia and stenosis: a 25-year experience with 277 cases. Arch Surg 1998; 133[5]:490-496). Hereditary multiple intestinal atresias, first reported by Guttman et al in 1973, is the rarest form of multiple atresias (Guttman FM, Braun P, Garance PH, et al, Multiple atresias and a new syndrome of hereditary multiple atresias involving the gastrointestinal tract from stomach to rectum. J Pediatr Surg 1973;8:633-640; Bass J, Pyloric atresia associated with multiple intestinal atresias and immune deficiency. J Pediatr Surg 2002;37:941-942.). It has been proposed to be autosomal recessive, to involve atresias in a variable combination of sites from stomach to rectum, and to be universally fatal (Bilodeau A, Prasil P, Cloutier R, et al, Hereditary multiple intestinal atresia: thirty years later. J Pediatr Surg 2004;39:726-730; Moreno LA, Gottrand F, Turck D, et al, Severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome associated with autosomal recessive familial multiple gastrointestinal atresias: study of a family. Am J Med Genet 1990;37:143-146). Patients have significant intestinal dysfunction and unrelenting sepsis stemming from a poorly defined, severe immunologic defect. Our case report presents 2 full siblings to nonconsanguineous parents with pyloric atresia, multiple small bowel and colonic atresias, and severe immune dysfunction. Care was withdrawn within 3 months of life on both siblings after multiple bouts of sepsis. Data suggest that the immune defect may not be primary, but in fact be secondary to intestinal dysfunction. Although the subjects in this article ultimately had fatal outcomes, a comprehensive immunologic/physiologic picture is presented in hopes of furthering the understanding of this grave disease.
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PMID:Hereditary multiple intestinal atresias: 2 new cases and review of the literature. 2038 66

Intestinal atresia type III B (apple peel) and gastroschisis are both congenital malformations who require early surgical correction in neonatal age. Their association is very rare. We present the case of a full term infant with partial apple peel ileal atresia and a small defect of the anterior abdominal wall, complicated by in utero intestinal perforation and subsequent meconial peritonitis. We observed a partial atresia of small intestine, with involvement of terminal ileus savings of jejunum and a large part of the proximal ileum, small anterior abdominal wall defect with herniation of few bowel loops, intestinal malrotation. Paralytic ileus and infections are the main causes of morbidity and mortality at neonatal age. In our case, in spite of the mild phenotype, prognosis has been complicated by the onset of functional bowel obstruction, caused by chemical peritonitis resulting from contact with either amniotic fluid and meconium.
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PMID:Meconial peritonitis in a rare association of partial ileal apple-peel atresia with small abdominal wall defect. 2557 43