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

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

Intussusception is relatively rare in adults and differs from the childhood form in its etiology, presentation and treatment. Unlike childhood intussusception, adult intussusception is usually due to underlying pathologic lead points, most probably neoplasms. The main clinical presentation of intussusception in the adult is chronic abdominal pain, and acute adult intussusception is uncommon. Here, we describe an uncommon case of acute ileocecal intussusception due to ileal lymphoid hyperplasia in a 46-year-old woman. Lymphoid hyperplasia of the intestines is a benign reactive process. Intestinal lymphoid hyperplasia has been reported in association with infections and as an allergic response to various foods. In adults, it has been reported to occur in association with immune deficiencies. There were no obvious causes for this patient's ileal lymphoid hyperplasia. We conclude that physicians need to consider intussusception, due to intestinal lymphoid hyperplasia, as a possible cause of acute abdominal pain in adults, even in the absence of any specific medical history.
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PMID:Ileocecal intussusception in an adult: a case report. 1745 Apr 97