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

Intussusception is commonly the etiology of intestinal obstruction in infants and children. To investigate demographic data, clinicopathologic features and therapeutic prognosis of patients with intussusception, we reviewed 361 intussusceptions in 333 patients over an 11-year period. Most patients were below two years of age and there was a male preponderance of 1.6:1. There was no seasonal difference between the number of cases. The clinical triad of vomiting, abdominal colicky pain and bloody stools was manifested in only one-third of our patients. Secondary intussusception contributed to 6.6% of cases and Meckel's diverticulum was the most common pathologic cause. Positive findings were recorded in 82% of 67 patients undergoing sonographic examination. Intussusception of the ileo-colic type was most frequently encountered. Most patients (79%) were diagnosed within 48 hours and almost all cases underwent primary barium enema reduction. The success rate was 45%. Laparotomy was performed in 207 patients (57%) refractory to enema reduction or with critical illness, and intestinal resection was required in 28 (14%). Long-standing duration of illness (> 24 hours), positive clinical triad, positive pathologic lead point, and radiologic finding of bowel obstruction were identified as risk factors leading patients to surgical reduction (p < 0.001). Postoperative complications and recurrent intussusception developed in some patients, and the overall mortality was 0.6%. The clinical characteristics of intussusception in children generally remained unchanged as compared to previous reports. Early identification of patients with risk factors for surgical treatment is important to decrease the need for intestinal resection.
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PMID:Intussusception in infants and children: risk factors leading to surgical reduction. 785 36

Meckel's diverticulum is one of the primary concerns in the differential diagnosis of the pediatric patient with massive, acute gastrointestinal bleeding, intussusception, or abdominal pain of uncertain cause. The hospital course of two children with Meckel's diverticulum, successfully treated by laparoscopic excision, is presented, along with details of the operative procedure. Both patients recovered from the procedure without incident and were discharged at 24 and 48 hours after surgery. The authors believe a laparoscopic approach is safe and effective in the diagnosis and treatment of Meckel's diverticulum.
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PMID:Laparoscopic diagnosis and excision of Meckel's diverticulum. 801 1

Acute appendicitis is the first cause of emergency surgery in children. Actually, emergency abdominal sonography has evolved in differential diagnosis of acute appendicitis in children to differentiate it from other causes of acute abdomen as mesenteric lymphoadenitis, acute right pyelonephritis, acute diverticulitis in Meckel's diverticulum, intestinal intussusception, regional enterits, primary peritonitis, anaphylactoid purpura of Henoch-Schonlein. The aim of this study is the evaluation of the usefulness of abdominal sonography in diagnosing acute appendicitis in our current series of pediatric patients. We have operated 102 patients afflicted by appendicitis admitted to the pediatric department of Ospedale San Raffaele, Milano in a period of 5 years and operated on for appendectomy. In the last 2 years 36 patients were evaluated with abdominal sonography. This diagnostic tool showed in 34 (94.4%) a liquid effusion, sometimes thick of the right iliac fossa. In 2 patients the appendix had thickened layers, was edematous and the lumen was clearly filled with debris. Abdominal sonography has given a clear cut picture of the acute inflammatory process of the appendix. None of these patients has suffered from septic or obstructive complications. Mean duration of hospital stay was 6.35 days (3-15 days). Differential diagnosis of acute appendicitis can be extremely variable, from simple, paradigmatic situations to the most intriguing ones. This concept is well emphasized by William Silen when he says that "differential diagnosis of acute appendicits is an encyclopedic compendium of every abdominal disease that causes pain" in the 11th edition of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Current diagnostic-therapeutic trends in treatment of pediatric appendicitis]. 803 58

Small bowel obstruction, excluding postoperative adhesive ileus, in patients > 1 month old treated between June 1982 and May 1992 at Gunma Children's Hospital Medical Center is reviewed. There were 32 patients, 22 boys and 10 girls, whose ages ranged from 1 month to 6 years (median 9 months). Intussusception was the most frequent cause of obstruction and was seen in 17 patients (53.1%). Causative lesions were identified in five patients, and were ileal duplication cysts in four and Meckel's diverticulum in one. Incarcerated inguinal hernia and mesenteric cysts resulted in bowel obstruction in six and three patients, respectively. Other causes included mesodiverticular band, ileal volvulus without malrotation, abnormal adhesion of omentum, abnormal band, vitelline duct remnant and trapping in a mesenteric defect. As for the age distribution, there was no significant correlation between the causes of obstruction and the age of patients. Ultrasonography was useful in differential diagnosis, and this modality should therefore be used in every patient with signs of small bowel obstruction.
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PMID:Small bowel obstruction in children: review of 10 years experience. 810 28

Surgical specimens (n = 48) or autopsy case materials (n = 15) were studied from 63 pediatric patients (44 males and 19 females) with intussusceptions involving the ileocecal junction (38 patients [60.3%]), ileum (16 patients [25.4%]), jejunum (four patients [6.3%]), and other sites (five patients [8%]). Lymphoid hyperplasia formed the leading edge in 32 cases (51%); other lesions included Meckel diverticulum (six cases), lymphoma (four cases), adenomyomatous hamartoma (four cases), cecal duplication cyst (three cases), ectopic pancreas (two cases), congenital bowel malformation (two cases), and examples of Peutz-Jeghers polyp, lymphangioma, leiomyoma, and inflammatory fibroid polyp (one case each). In six cases there was no associated lesion. Immunohistochemical evaluation for adenovirus was performed in 16 of the 32 cases in which lymphoid hyperplasia was present, and five reactive cases were identified; characteristic intranuclear adenovirus inclusions were visible on hematoxylin-eosin-stained specimens from all five of these cases as well as in five additional cases (a total of 10 of 32 cases [31.2%]). The presence of Yersinia sp was confirmed by serology in one case having characteristic histologic findings. Fourteen deaths were attributable to consequences of intussusception; these patients were younger (median and mean ages, 5.5 and 8.6 months; age range, 1 month to 3.5 years) than the surviving patients (median and mean ages, 2.0 and 3.2 years; age range, 6 days to 14 years), but were not more likely to have evidence of adenovirus infection.
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PMID:Intussusception, adenovirus, and children: a brief reaffirmation. 811 17

In the United States, four diseases account for the vast majority of cases of lower intestinal bleeding: arteriovenous malformation, diverticulosis, neoplasms, and internal hemorrhoids. In this article the authors discuss less frequent causes of gastrointestinal bleeding. "Common" less frequent causes of gastrointestinal bleeding include solitary rectal ulcer syndrome, colonic varices, mesenteric vascular insufficiency, small bowel diverticula, Meckel's diverticulum, aortoenteric fistula, vasculitis, small intestinal ulceration, endometriosis, radiation-induced injury, and intussusception. Less frequent causes of gastrointestinal bleeding that have been recently described include portal colopathy, diversion colitis, and gastrointestinal bleeding in runners.
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PMID:Less frequent causes of lower gastrointestinal bleeding. 813 99

A 3-year-old boy with a radiographic finding of an isolated invaginated Meckel's diverticulum is presented. The abnormality simulates a polypoid filling defect in the distal small bowel on barium examination. This particular manifestation of Meckel's diverticulum is very rare and has been reported only once previously. This article re-emphasizes the need to think about this possibility when a polypoid filling defect is seen in the distal small bowel. At the time laparotomy was performed, the abnormality had progressed into a triple intussusception, a rare surgical finding.
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PMID:Radiographic characteristics of isolated invaginated Meckel's diverticulum. 823 85

Three infants younger than 2 years presented with episodic bloody-to-tarry stool of moderate amount. Two of them were diagnosed to have Meckel's diverticulum because of a positive 99mTc pertechnetate scan. Although the third infant had two negative radionuclide scans within 3 months, Meckel's diverticulum was still suspected by exclusion studies. All three infants underwent laparoscopic surgery. At laparoscopy, a Meckel's diverticulum was identified in all. Besides, an ileoileo intussusception just proximal to the diverticulum was also found in one patient. Reduction of the intussusception and diverticulectomy were performed successfully by laparoscopic procedure. Compared with conventional laparotomy, this procedure has the advantages of direct preoperative visual confirmation of the diagnosis, less traumatic access, much shorter recovery period and perhaps fewer intraoperative and postoperative complications. And thus, laparoscopic surgery has the potential of becoming regular treatment for symptomatic Meckel's diverticulum of infants.
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PMID:Laparoscopic Meckel's diverticulectomy in infants: report of three cases. 830 65

Over the past decade, pneumatic reduction has been increasingly accepted as the treatment of choice for pediatric intussusception. However the effectiveness of air compared with the more traditional barium reduction of intussusception continues to be a source of concern and debate. From August 1993 to November 1994, pneumatic reduction was used to treat 75 episodes in 73 patients with proven intussusception at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taoyuan. Two patients underwent air reduction twice because of recurrence following an initial successful reduction. The recurrence rate was 3%. Successful reduction was achieved in 65/75 (87%) episodes. None of the patients experienced any complications following the procedure. In two of the 10 patients in whom reduction failed, one was subsequently found to have a Meckel's diverticulum and the other a duplication cyst as a leading point. This prospective study indicates that air enema is a safe and effective form of treatment for intussusception in infants and children. Pneumatic reduction should be the treatment of choice in the initial management of intussusception.
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PMID:Pneumatic reduction of intussusception in children. 852 82

Intussusception is the invagination of one bowel segment into another. It is an emergent condition that most commonly affects infants between five and nine months of age, but it can also occur in other age groups. The etiology is usually idiopathic in infants five to nine months of age; neonates, older children and adults more commonly have lead points such as a Meckel's diverticulum or a neoplasm. Early diagnosis is essential to avoid treatment delays, which can increase morbidity and mortality. It has been reported that patients with intussusception present with abdominal pain, vomiting and bloody stools, but this classic triad is often absent. More commonly, lethargy and irritability are the presenting signs. A rectal examination, with testing for occult blood, is an important part of the evaluation and is frequently positive. Barium enema is the gold standard for diagnosis and also has therapeutic potential for reducing the intussusception. Ultrasound is an accurate, low-risk screening tool when performed and interpreted by an experienced ultrasonographer. Surgical reduction is performed if nonoperative reduction is contraindicated or unsuccessful, or if a lead point is suspected.
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PMID:Intussusception. 867 37


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