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

Constipated patients evaluated by evacuation proctography may be subjected to vigorous medical therapy or surgery, even colectomy, based on radiographic findings that have been called "abnormal" in the literature. Criteria for normal defecography are not uniformly established, nor has correlation of structural or functional findings with symptoms been clearly documented. We prospectively studied 21 asymptomatic volunteers to assess the frequency of findings in a control population, and to establish a quantitative measure of normal rectal emptying. Standard defecography technique demonstrated rectocele, intussusception, pelvic descent, or puborectalis spasm in 14/21 volunteers (67%). The range of rectal emptying was 12.5% to 100%, with four subjects (19%) evacuating less than or equal to 40% of the barium paste. There was no correlation between severity of radiographic findings and degree of evacuation. Defecography results in patients being considered for symptomatic intervention should be interpreted cautiously, given the wide range of normal variation in a control population.
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PMID:Evacuation proctography in normal volunteers. 186 Jul 66

In the past 9 years, we have operated on 56 patients with gastrointestinal bleeding of obscure origin. Selective visceral angiography demonstrated the bleeding lesions in 24 of the 30 patients who underwent this investigation. Six of these 24 patients, however, had a negative angiogram initially and the lesions were only demonstrated on a repeat angiogram. The negative initial angiograms were due to: (1) slow bleeding from lesions in two patients; (2) a small bleeding tumour that caused only intermittent jejunojejunal intussusception in one patient; (3) technical fault in one patient; and (4) spasm of the bleeding vascular lesions and their feeding arteries in two patients. We advocate repeat angiography the following day in all patients in whom profuse bleeding continues, and during the next intestinal bleeding in those whose bleeding stops after the initial negative angiography. In patients who have repeated episodes of massive bleeding, and in whom full investigations fail to reveal the bleeding source, repeat angiography carried out 4 weeks after the bleeding has stopped can sometimes demonstrate the vascular lesions.
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PMID:Repeat selective visceral angiography in patients with gastrointestinal bleeding of obscure origin. 278 35

Forty-three patients with histologically proven solitary ulcer syndrome of the rectum were examined by defaecography and 33 by barium enema. Barium enema showed changes in the rectum in all cases. Thickening of the rectal folds and spasm were most common, followed by ulceration and pseudopolypoid change. None of these changes is individually pathognomonic of the solitary ulcer syndrome, but viewed in conjunction they are highly suggestive of the condition. During defaecography, intussusception of the rectum was observed in 34 cases (79%). In 19 (44%) a complete external prolapse was present while intra-anal and intra-rectal intussusception was found in 15 (35%). Intussusception arose in most cases from the mid-rectum, and rarely from a rectal mucosal prolapse of the ampulla. Awareness of the abnormalities of the solitary ulcer syndrome on barium enema enables the radiologist to suggest the diagnosis and recommend defaecography to establish the functional disorder, which may help determine the appropriate medical or surgical treatment.
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PMID:Barium enema and defaecography in the diagnosis and evaluation of the solitary rectal ulcer syndrome. 361 39

Anal endosonography, including measurements of anal sphincter size, was performed in 16 patients with obstructed defecation. The findings were compared with those at defecography and anal manometry. Patients with rectocele and intussusception had a normal endosonographic appearance. One patient with puborectalic spasm had normal sonography. There was no correlation between sphincter size and anal manometry. The external sphincter muscle was thicker and the cross-sectional area larger in patients with obstructed defecation than in healthy controls (p < 0.05). Two patients with sphincter spasm and impaired rectal emptying at defecography had clearly thickened internal sphincters which may be the cause of their defecatory disorder. Three patients with previous anal dilatation or hemorrhoidectomy had sphincteric defects. Anal endosonography may be considered in patients with obstructed defecation to identify patients with internal sphincter hypertrophy.
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PMID:Anal endosonographic findings in patients with obstructed defecation. 842 46

Aberrant rests of pancreatic tissue can be found throughout the gastrointestinal system and are known as pancreatic heterotopia or ectopic pancreas (EP). Authors report a 12-year-old girl with jejunal EP with a long-lasting history of sporadic bilious vomiting. Upper gastrointestinal (GI) study showed delayed passage beyond duodeno-jejunal junction. During laparotomy a 2x2 cm mass was encountered on the mesenteric border of the jejunum, 3 cm distal to the ligament of Treitz. Histopathologic examination revealed pancreatic tissue. The mass was excised and end-to-end anastomosis was performed. Postoperative course of the patient was uneventful and she is doing well after 10 months. Intestinal obstruction due to EP has been reported to occur only if it causes intussusception. Intestinal obstruction without intussusception due to jejunal EP has not been reported. In our case, the EP tissue was located just beneath the mucosa and involved the muscular layer. The foreign body effect of the EP tissue involving the muscular layer may cause dysmotility and/or local spasm, which we think were responsible for the long-lasting sporadic bilious vomiting in our patient.
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PMID:A case of proximal jejunal ectopic pancreas causing sporadic vomiting. 1292 7

Background and Objective: Intussusception is the most frequent pediatric abdominal emergency. Intestinal spasm, ischemia, necrosis and even death may occur without prompt diagnosis and treatment. The ultrasound-guided reduction by saline enema is a preferred non-surgical procedure for intussusception. Muscular relaxants can relieve the intestinal spasm and edema by relaxing the intestinal smooth muscle, which may facilitate the treatment of intussusception. However, controversy persists on whether muscular relaxants are effective in the procedure. Therefore, the purpose of our study was to assess the efficacy of atropine known as a muscular relaxant in ultrasound-guided reduction by saline enema in children with intussusception. Methods: All patients with intussusception diagnosed and treated in our department from July 2016 to February 2018 were included. Four hundred and thirty-seven children were enrolled and randomly divided into two groups: an atropine group and a control group. Intramuscular atropine at a dose of 0.02 mg per kilogram of body weight was administrated 15 min before ultrasound-guided reduction by saline enema in the atropine group. In the control group, the ultrasound-guided reduction was performed without using any muscular relaxants. The success rate, duration of the reduction, volume of saline, maximum intra-rectal pressure and complications were recorded and compared between the two groups. Results: The success rate was 95.9% (212 out of 221) and 94.9% (205 out of 216) in the atropine group and the control group, respectively. No significant difference was observed in the success rate between the two groups (P > 0.05). The duration of reduction was significantly lower in the atropine group than in the control group (P < 0.01). The volume of saline was also significantly lower in the atropine group than in the control group (P < 0.05). The maximum intra-rectal pressure showed no difference between the two groups (P > 0.05). Conclusion: Atropine premedication can facilitate ultrasound-guided reduction by saline enema in children with intussusception, by reducing the duration of reduction and the volume of saline in the procedure.
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PMID:Atropine Premedication Facilitates Ultrasound-Guided Reduction by Saline Enema in Children With Intussusception. 3142 71