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Query: UMLS:C0021933 (intussusception)
3,822 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report a case of multiple circumscribed colonic lipomas and undertake a review of the literature. Since the end of the 18th century, 45 clinical and autopsy cases have been reported. These exceptional lesions are sometimes strictly latent and discovered by chance, sometimes they may give rise to a picture of chronic intestinal obstruction and, more rarely, that of intussusception. Comparison of radiology and colonoscopy permits one to better suspect the diagnosis for there are unusual signs concerning both lesions. The treatment is mainly surgical but sometimes lipomectomy by the endoscopic route may be carried out when the lesions are not numerous.
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PMID:[Multiple lipomas of the colon and rectum]. 18 87

Inflammatory fibrous polyp of the ileum is a rare condition. This report adds one patient to the 11 previously reported. These lesions usually involve intermittent, colicky abdominal pain, often of several weeks duration and occasionally as a cause of acute intestinal obstruction. X-rays usually show small bowel obstruction or intussusception, but may be completely normal. The pathological diagnosis is seldom made before microscopic examination of resected specimens. They are clinically interpreted to be neoplasm and treated by segmental resection. No recurrences have been reported after treatment. Etiology is unknown.
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PMID:Inflammatory fibrous polyp (pseudotumor) of ileum, a rare cause of intestinal obstruction. 23 38

A total of 600 cases, comprising 4 of our cases and 596 others in Japan, was analyzed, and the diagnosis of Meckel's diverticulum was made in only 34 of them. The rate of diagnosis was 5.7 per cent, which is very low. The most common complication of this disease was intestinal obstruction, the second most common was intussusception, the third was inflammation, and the fourth was rectal bleeding. Ectopic tissue, present in ninety-three patients, consisted of ectopic gastric mucosa in fifty-eight. 99mTc-P scanning was performed on fifteen patients. In twelve of them ectopic gastric mucosa was observed. However, it was not found in three, all of whom had false-positive scans.
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PMID:Meckel's diverticulum. Investigation of 600 patients in Japanese literature. 30 25

There is a high incidence of primary colonic intussusceptions in infants and children in Africa. The case histories of 37 patients are reviewed. Of the varieties described, the caecocolic intussusception (16 patients) presents as an intestinal upset, often mild, with symptoms of colic and vomiting. In many of these patients there is known to be an intestinal infestation with Ascaris lumbricoides. This often leads to a delay in establishing the correct diagnosis. Colocolic intussusception (13 patients) gives rise to more acute abdominal symptoms. On clinical assessment, signs of intestinal obstruction are found and there is usually an intra-abdominal mass which can be palpated in the left colon. Further confirmatory evidence of intussusception is the finding of occult blood in stools. There is an unusually high incidence of sigmoid intussusceptions in infants (8 patients). The diagnosis of this form of intussusception is often delayed owing to inadequate clinical assessment of prolapsed bowel at the anal orifice. The length of the prolapsed bowel, the curved nature of the prolapse and the possible demonstration of a sulcus between the prolapsed bowel and the anal canal wall, aid in diagnosis.
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PMID:Colonic intussusceptions in children. 36 78

Two cases of solitary small intestinal lipoma are presented. One occured in the duodenum as a submucosal pedunculated polyp with a bleeding ulcerated surface. This was diagnosed by means of the fiberoptic duodenoscope (Olympus D1G2). The second involved a large massive submucosal lipoma which formed the leading edge of an intussusception resulting in small bowel obstruction. A brief review of the pathology, complications, symptoms, radiographic diagnosis and treatment of small intestinal lipomas is given.
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PMID:Two cases of complicated intestinal lipoma. Review of small intestinal lipomas. 46 54

Two newborns with similar lesions were treated at two children's hospitals. Each newborn presented with an abdominal emergency that required immediate surgery. In each instance, small bowel obstruction was clinically and radiologically suspected; barium enema examination showed an irreducible colonic intussusception in the first baby and a colonic perforation in the second. Both these findings required immediate operation. The baby with the intussusception had a colon resection and a primary anastomosis, while the newborn with the perforation had a resection and temporary colostomy. Subsequent to the initial surgery, neither baby has received any further treatment for the tumor. The two patients are now well at 13 yr and 6 yr of age.
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PMID:Colon sarcoma in the newborn. 49 Feb 93

Forty patients with colorectal schistosomiasis who failed to respond to medical therapy were studied. They had dysentery with bloody mucus and anemia, polyps, pericolic masses, and schistosomal ulcers. Two patients had cecal masses which appeared to be intussusception and appendicitis. Three patients had chronic intestinal obstruction. Diverting transverse colostomy, followed by other surgical procedures, is the safest method of management.
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PMID:Colorectal schistosomiasis: clinicopathologic study and management. 49 94

At the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria, over a 30-month period (January 1975 to June 1977) more than 29 cases were fully studied. Nine patients presented with acute large bowel obstruction. In five cases, colonic neoplasms were palpated abdominally before surgery, and four of the patients were initially being treated for "hemorrhoids". All the patients presented at late stages. There was neither socio-economic nor sexual bias in this affliction. Sixty-nine percent of all the tumors occurred in the anorectal area well within the reach of the index finger, and 27.5% occurred in the right colon. Differential diagnosis included ameboma, rectal schistosomiasis, rectal tubercolosis, anal fistula and adult chronic intermittent intussusception. The treatment administered depended on the nature, location and stage of the disease. There was a case of metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the hepatic flexure causing obstruction. The metastasis was from carcinoma of the cervix which had been treated with cesium insertions about three years previously. It is now known that colon and anorectal neoplasms, once regarded as rare among Africans living in tropical Africa, is not that rare. With the Africans boycotting native "doctors" in favor of medical institutions, many of the diseases once thought to be rare in Africans will unfortunately become less rare.
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PMID:Colon and anorectal neoplasms in a tropical African population. 54 Nov 86

Two cases of primary small bowel tumors causing an acute intussusception are presented. In one case two polyps were found and in the other case a lipoma in the wall of the jejunum. In both cases there were symptoms of recurrent bowel obstruction for several months before the acute condition. Although intussusception caused by a benign tumor of the small bowel is a rare condition it should be taken into consideration in the differential diagnosis of abdominal pain of doubtful origin.
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PMID:Recurrent small bowel obstruction caused by a benign tumor. A report of two cases. 70 94

Eighty-one patients with proven intussusception were treated at the Cincinnati Children's Hospital from 1970-1974. One died. Seven of these had ileo-ileal intussusception, all treated surgically. Seventy-four had colonic components of their intussusceptions. In 58 of these patients (78%), reduction was attempted at barium enema, successfully in 32. Hydrostatic reduction was abandoned and the patient operated upon when the intussusception was not pushed out of the colon, when barium failed to reflux into several loops of ileum, or when there was a large persistent filling defect in the cecum or terminal ileum. Primary operation without barium enema was done in 16 patients. The appearance of intestinal obstruction by abdominal x-ray seemed to give the best warning about the complicated, incarcerated, or gangrenous intussusception. Primary operation is, therefore, advised for the patient with intussusception if there is x-ray evidence of intestinal obstruction. The age of the patient and the duration of his symptoms do not seem important in this regard, except as they correlate with peritonitis or obstruction. For the patient without peritonitis or intestinal obstruction, attempted reduction of the intussusception at barium enema seems safe and effective, regardless of the patient's age or duration of his symptoms.
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PMID:Intussusception in the 1970s: indications for operation. 87 22


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