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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (volvulus)
4,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The experience of diagnosis and surgical treatment of gastric diseases in 56 children was summarized. In 33 (58.93%) of the patients was revealed the gastric tumor or tumor-like formation (lymphosarcoma, polyp, cyst and duplication, carcinoma, inflammatory pseudotumor, fibromatosis, lymphangioma), including the malignant one in 15 (26.79%). For the traumatic injury of the organ 5 patients were operated on, including 2--for the gunshot wound. The gastric ulcer disease complications (perforation, bleeding) were diagnosed in 7 patients, and in additional 5 the erosive gastritis was the cause of the gastric bleeding. The gastric volvulus in 2 children, cicatricial stenosis in 3 and foreign body in 2 were diagnosed also. The timely diagnosis have promoted the treatment result improvement.
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PMID:[Surgical diseases of the stomach in children]. 1048 84

In a retrospective series of 95 patients requiring emergency surgery for distal colonic obstruction, primary bowel resection followed by immediate anastomosis after intraoperative colonic irrigation was performed. Carcinoma was the cause of obstruction in 81 cases (85%); 13 patients had diverticulitis, and 1 had sigmoid volvulus. The technique of on-table lavage was similar to that described by Dudley in 1980: a caecostomy tube was used in 86 patients (90%) and was removed on the tenth postoperative day. 4 patients died, none from complications of anastomotic leakage. There were three anastomotic leakages (3.1%) and 10 radiologic leaks were observed. 3 patients were reoperated. The mean hospital stay was 23 days. The results of this study suggest that intraoperative colonic irrigation is an effective method, enabling the surgeon to perform primary anastomosis with reasonable safety after emergency resection of selected distal colonic lesions.
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PMID:[Preoperative colonic lavage and one-stage excision-anastomosis in obstruction of the left colon]. 1086 39

Access to the stomach for long-term enteral feeding or decompression can be achieved with numerous methods. The methods include laparotomy, gastroscopy, laparoscopy, and fluoroscopy. All methods have been shown to be safe and effective. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) was introduced by Ponsky in 1990, and laparoscopic gastrostomy was introduced 10 years later. PEG rapidly replaced open gastrostomy as the method of choice for enteral nutrition. The laparoscopic alternative was ideal for patients who were not candidates for PEG placement. The laparoscopic or laparoendoscopic placement of enteral tubes allows visualization of the intestinal tract to ensure proper tube positioning. Many patients are not candidates for a PEG because of head and neck cancer, esophageal obstruction from stricture or carcinoma, large hiatal hernia, gastric volvulus, overlying intestine or liver, facial trauma with wired mandible, or severe stomatitis secondary to radiation therapy. Lastly, laparoscopy lessens the chance of injury to the surrounding structures, adhesions can be safely lysed, and metastatic or concomitant disease may be identified. This report will review the numerous methods available to the laparoscopic surgeon for gaining access to the stomach or intestine.
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PMID:Laparoendoscopic approaches to enteral access. 1158 70

We reviewed the clinical and pathologic finding of 22 resected allografts from 19 of the 83 children who underwent a variety of small intestinal transplant procedures in the years 1990-2000 at the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. Resections were compared with prior mucosal biopsies because resections allow for evaluation of the entire bowel thickness, including the feeding vessels, and obviate the problems of limited sampling. Partial resections that were done soon after the transplant, or soon after additional surgery, were for surgical problems such as leaks, adhesions, and volvulus. None had biopsy features suggestive of rejection or infection. Partial resections done late (6 months or more) after transplantation were more likely to be related to allograft immune biology; two had a sclerosing peritonitis that was confined to the allograft, and one had an obstructing carcinoma arising in the allograft mucosa. One patient had a localized stricture, demonstrated to be due to graft vascular disease at partial resection, and this patient went on to have the allograft removed a year later for chronic rejection. Early complete allograft enterectomies were for refractory acute cellular rejection, 1-2 months following transplant. One was removed for pancreatitis and liver failure from operative complications. Late allograft enterectomies were generally for chronic rejection, some with residual acute rejection, but there were also a number of patients who had multiple superimposed conditions such as cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, and post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder in various combinations. One had idiopathic scarring and developed an adynamic bowel that remains unexplained. Examination of the resected specimens allows for dissection of the multiple contributions to graft failure, especially the vascular disease that can rarely be seen on mucosal biopsy. An unexpected finding was the impressive hypertrophy of neural elements, nerves, and ganglion cells in many of the patients, the significance of which requires further investigation.
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PMID:Pediatric intestinal transplantation: the resected allograft. 1181 64

The commonest cause of large bowel obstruction is colorectal malignancy. Volvulus of the colon is a rare cause and caecal volvulus accounts for less than 1% of all cases of intestinal obstruction. Reports of concurrent occurrence of obstructing lesions of the right and left colon are rare and anecdotal. We report a case of Caecal volvulus and carcinoma of the rectosigmoid in a 70-year-old lady.
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PMID:A rare case of dual obstruction of the colon. 1196 30

Intestinal parasites are Giardia lamblia, Cryptosporidium parvum, Entamoeba histolytica, hookworms, ascaris, tape worms and others. As to organ parasites, their life-threatening courses are pointed out: amebiasis in the intestine, liver, lung and brain, toxoplasmosis in the brain, lung and heart muscle, including the danger for the child of a pregnant woman with an acute infection, West African sleeping sickness with encephalitis, the East African form with polyserositis, South American Chagas' disease with intestinal and myocardial involvement, visceral leishmaniasis Kala Azar, the filariasis Onchocerca volvulus with threatening blindness, the dog tapeworm with cysts and Echinococcus multilocularis with carcinoma-like infiltration of the liver and other organs, cysticercosis of the brain, eye and muscle tissue; partly generalizing parasitoses in immuno-suppressed including AIDS patients, finally skin parasites as causes of disease (e.g. scabies), and as potential carriers of pathogens.
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PMID:[Detection of parasites and symptoms of parasitic diseases. 2: Parasites of the gastrointestinal tract, tissue and organ parasites, ecto- and skin parasites]. 1291 2

Caecal volvulus is a well described but unusual condition. We report here, a case of caecal volvulus in a 53-year-old Caucasian woman associated with intussuscepted submucous lipoma of the ileocaecal region. The imaging and pathology are presented. Submucous lipoma of the ileocaecal region is uncommon but well described. It can be mistaken as carcinoma of the ascending colon on barium enema and on computed tomography scan. The combination with caecal volvulus is a rare occurrence.
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PMID:Submucous lipoma of the ileocaecal valve presenting as caecal volvulus. 1516 Nov 33

Bowel resections of at least 70% of the total length give rise to nutritional and metabolic disorders. The consequences are also related to the site of the resection itself, to the causative disease and thus to the patient's morphological and functional adaptation capacity. Over the past 20 years we have operated on 32 patients for vascular disorders, Crohn's disease, intestinal volvulus, actinic enteritis, and ileo-caecal carcinoma. In all patients total parenteral nutrition was started and followed by enteral nutrition and oral feeding after variable periods of time. The postoperative course, in terms of adaptation and stabilisation, was regular on most cases: only in the patients operated on for Crohn's disease was symptom and nutritional remission belated or incomplete. The perioperative mortality was 34% (11 patients). The extent of the resection was often conditioned by the topography of irreversible anatomico-pathological lesions and only in one case did a colic resection prove necessary. In more extensive resections, involving a longer adaptation time, enteral nutrition was supplemented with total parenteral nutrition for lengthier periods.
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PMID:[Extensive small bowel resections]. 1624 Oct 95

Intestinal obstruction in pregnancy is rare and difficult to diagnose. Common causes of gestational intestinal obstruction include adhesions, volvulus, intussuscetion, carcinoma, hernia and appendicitis [3]. Abdominal pain is a common feature, but the displacement of abdominal organs as pregnancy progresses results in atypical location of the pain and hence delay in diagnosis. We report a case of intestinal obstruction at 33 weeks gestation in a woman with previous appendicectomy. Clinical suspicion of the presence of obstruction is required for prompt diagnosis and aggressive intervention, to minimise the morbidity and mortality of this rare complication of pregnancy.
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PMID:Gestational intestinal obstruction: a case report and review of literature. 1640 80

Intestinal obstruction may be mechanical or non-mechanical (adynamic ileus). Adhesions and external hernias are the most common causes of obstruction in small intestine, whereas carcinoma, sigmoid diverticulitis, and volvulus are the most common causes in large intestine obstruction. Distension of the intestine caused by gas and fluid accumulation in the obstructed segment is the key pathophysiological mechanism initiating ileus with subsequent multiorgan failure and death. Surgery should always be undertaken if complete obstruction or strangulation is suggested and ileus is established. Before operation, the fluid and electrolyte balance should be restored and decompression instituted by means of a nasogastric tube. Delaying the operation because of improvement in patient well-being during resuscitation is only justified in those suffering from large intestine obstruction due to colorectal carcinoma. Purely nonoperative treatment is safe only in the presence of incomplete obstruction and best utilized in patients with postoperative adynamic ileus or repeated episodes of partial obstruction.
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PMID:[Ileus disease]. 1696 60


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