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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the 14 yr from 1965 through 1978, 49 infants presented shortly after birth with intestinal obstruction due to impacted meconium. Three of these patients did not have
fibrocystic disease
. Eight patients were cured by a Gastrografin enema. There were 18 patients who had complications that included associated atresia,
volvulus
, and/or peritonitis. Various operations were done including resection with either primary anastomosis or enterostomy or varieties of the foregoing. Twenty-three babies had the simple uncomplicated form of meconium ileus. Eleven of these underwent resection and six patients died. Twelve patients were treated by laparotomy, ileotomy through a purse-string suture and prolonged irrigations using acetylcysteine. Of this group only one succumbed. This latter course of management is recommended for patients with simple uncomplicated meconium ileus as it involves no resection, no enterostomy, nor any primary anastomosis.
...
PMID:Meconium ileus: laparotomy without resection, anastomosis, or enterostomy. 55 Nov 49
Meconium peritonitis is a chemical peritonitis usually resulting from antenatal bowel rupture. Prenatal ultrasound findings include ascites, intraabdominal masses, bowel dilatation and the development of intraabdominal calcifications [1-5]. The most common bowel disorders which lead to meconium peritonitis in utero are those resulting in bowel obstruction and perforation, such as small bowel atresias,
volvulus
and meconium ileus [1-5]. Meconium ileus is associated with
cystic fibrosis
in most cases, although extraluminal abdominal calcifications are usually scarce in cases of
cystic fibrosis
[1, 6]. Postnatal outcome for infants with meconium peritonitis depends on the etiology for bowel rupture and underlying disease.
...
PMID:Fetal meconium peritonitis without sequelae. 152 51
A material of 21 cases of meconium peritonitis treated by operation from 1972-1987 is presented. In four cases, intraabdominal anomaly was suspected on the basis of antenatal ultrasonography. The mortality was 19%. 57% developed symptoms during the first 24 hours, one at the age of one month and this case history is presented. Thirteen had intestinal atresia, 14 intrauterine
volvulus
, 7 open perforation, 13 pseudocyst, 1 gastroscisis. 2 had
cystic fibrosis
. Two patients are still attending the outpatient clinic on account of minor sequelae. The remainder have been discharged.
...
PMID:[Meconium peritonitis. A fetal catastrophe]. 200 48
Eight patients with
cystic fibrosis
had chronic abdominal pain and the other features of distal intestinal obstruction syndrome. Coexistent abdominal pathology was shown in six patients. Two had a small bowel
volvulus
, and the others had Crohn's disease, a small bowel fistula, appendix abscess, and an ovarian dermoid. Opiate abuse exacerbated symptoms in two other patients.
...
PMID:Pathology mimicking distal intestinal obstruction syndrome in cystic fibrosis. 235 96
During the 15 years from 1970 to 1984, 38 infants, all with
cystic fibrosis
, were treated for meconium ileus at The Montreal Children's Hospital and Ste-Justine Hospital for Children. Thirteen patients (34%) had complicated meconium ileus that included 7 perforations (2 colon, 5 ileum), 4
volvulus
, and 2 atresia with meconium pseudocyst. In this group, various operations were done: resection with primary anastomosis for atresia, or resection with enterostomy for peritonitis or
volvulus
. One died shortly after surgery. Of 25 patients with uncomplicated meconium ileus (66%), one died shortly after arrival from respiratory distress, leaving 24 patients available for study. Gastrografin enema was attempted on 20 patients with eight successes (40%). Of the remaining 16 patients with unresolved meconium ileus, nine were treated with laparotomy and ileostomy, and one with laparotomy and T-tube irrigation. Six patients were treated by laparotomy and enterotomy for irrigation with N-acetylcysteine and evacuation by Fogarty catheter, a technique not widely used. No one succumbed in this group. This latter method of management is recommended for patients with simple uncomplicated meconium ileus.
...
PMID:Meconium ileus: is a stoma necessary? 377
In recent years patients with
cystic fibrosis
(CF) have experienced longterm survival and have demonstrated a number of intra-abdominal complications. This report evaluates the intra-abdominal complications seen in 69 of 189 children with
cystic fibrosis
from 1972 to 1983. Forty-one patients were boys and twenty-eight girls. Complications occurred in 36 neonates, with meconium ileus (MI) noted in 33 and giant cystic meconium peritonitis (GCMP) in 3. Meconium ileus equivalent occurred in seven older children presenting with bowel obstruction. In addition, rectal prolapse occurred in 12, inguinal hernia in 10, intussusception in 3, cholelithiasis in 3, GE reflux in 4, stress ulcer in 1 and appendicitis in 1. Three infants with GCMP survived resection and enterostomy. Infants with MI were divided into simple (15) or complicated (18) cases. Nonoperative therapy using gastrografin enema was successful in three of eight with simple MI. Operative enterotomy and irrigation was successful in three cases while resection and enterostomy was done in nine. MI was complicated by atresia,
volvulus
and/or perforation in 18 cases requiring resection and anastomosis or enterostomy. Survival for MI was 86% compared to 36% in 25 MI patients treated in the previous two decades. Meconium ileus equivalent was successfully managed using gastrografin enema in five of seven children. Only 3 of 12 children with rectal prolapse required repair. Two cases of intussusception were reduced while one required resection. Three of 10 children had hernia recurrence due to chronic pulmonary problems.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Intra-abdominal complications of cystic fibrosis. 404 71
A variety of intestinal complications, including constipation, abdominal pain, palpable cecal masses, intestinal obstruction, intussusception, and
volvulus
, have been observed beyond the neonatal period in patients with
cystic fibrosis
(CF). In a retrospective chart review of 63 patients with CF, we found evidence of one or more of these complications in 26 patients (41.3%). The incidence of intestinal complications was not related to overall disease severity, pulmonary exacerbations, history of meconium ileus at birth, or dose or type of pancreatic enzyme replacement. There was no change in the incidence of intestinal complications after patients switched to a pH-sensitive enteric-coated microsphere enzyme preparation.
...
PMID:Incidence of distal intestinal obstruction syndrome in cystic fibrosis. 655 1
In nine patients with meconium peritonitis prenatal ultrasonographic findings were correlated with the clinical course and outcome. Ultrasound findings included polyhydramnion (n = 4), ascites (n = 4), disseminated (n = 3) and solitary echogenic areas (n = 1), echopoor cystic areas (n = 3) and echogenic-echopoor solitary areas (n = 1). Intra-abdominal calcifications were found in five patients before delivery. Eight neonates survived and were subsequently followed up, one fetus died in utero. Four of the eight survivors required surgery, namely for meconium ileus (n = 1), perforation secondary to intestinal
volvulus
(n = 2) and inguinal hernia associated with prenatal rubella infection (n = 1). Three patients were healthy, one patient required drainage of pleural effusion and respirator therapy but recovered without further problems.
Cystic fibrosis
was diagnosed in the patient with meconium ileus. Postnatal outcome could not be predicted from the prenatal sonographic findings.
...
PMID:[Meconium peritonitis: intrauterine follow-up--postnatal outcome]. 770 30
Meconium ileus is the earliest clinical manifestation of
cystic fibrosis
. We report 22 neonates with meconium ileus who had clinical evidence of
cystic fibrosis
. Patients were categorized as simple with inspissated meconium in the ileum with dilated loops proximally or complicated with
volvulus
or atresia and/or a perforation resulting in meconium peritonitis. Histopathology of the surgically resected specimens of small bowel revealed lesions typical of
cystic fibrosis
. Genetic studies were performed on all subjects, this study analyzes the usefulness in the detection of delta F508 mutation in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues obtained from patients with meconium ileus, ten of whom had the delta F508/delta F508 mutation.
...
PMID:[A retrospective study of delta F508 mutation in 22 patients operated on for meconium ileus]. 776 85
Meconium ileus was noted as an early manifestation of
cystic fibrosis
in 60 neonates between 1972 and 1991. There were 20 girls and 40 boys. A family history of
cystic fibrosis
was present in six children. Twenty-five neonates had uncomplicated meconium ileus due to inspissated meconium within the terminal ileum. Thirty-five neonates presented with 56 complications of meconium ileus, including
volvulus
(n = 22), atresia (n = 20), perforation (n = 6), and giant cystic meconium peritonitis (n = 8). Clinical presentation included abdominal distension, bilious vomiting, and failure to pass meconium. In two recent cases, prenatal ultrasonography detected a mass with proximal bowel distension indicative of cystic meconium peritonitis. Mechanical bowel obstruction in the other neonates was diagnosed from plain abdominal radiographs and barium enema. Ten patients with uncomplicated meconium ileus were successfully treated with a diatrizoate meglumine (Gastrografin) enema. The remaining 15 patients required a laparotomy, with 9 treated by bowel resection and enterostomy and 6 recent cases managed with enterotomy and irrigation. Complicated cases were managed by bowel resection and anastomosis (n = 15) or enterostomy (n = 20). Survival at 1 year was 92% in patients with uncomplicated meconium ileus and 89% for those with complicated meconium ileus. The therapy of choice for uncomplicated meconium ileus is nonoperative Gastrografin enema, with enterotomy and irrigation reserved for enema failures. Complicated cases require exploration and, in the absence of giant cystic meconium peritonitis, are usually amenable to bowel resection and primary anastomosis.
...
PMID:Contemporary management of meconium ileus. 833 77
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