Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (volvulus)
4,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Stabilization and delayed operation for patients with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is now widely accepted. When preoperative extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is needed, most centers have CDH repaired on ECMO to minimize the risk of postoperative deterioration. The authors adopted a policy of weaning from ECMO before repair in an effort to avoid hemorrhagic risks. They reviewed their experience with CDH patients who required ECMO for stabilization before repair but for whom post-ECMO repair was planned. The records of all high-risk CDH patients with a gestational age of at least 34 weeks were reviewed. Eighteen patients were identified. None of the eight who were stabilized and operated on without ECMO required bypass postoperatively; all survived. Ten were placed on bypass, nine for stabilization before repair. Of the nine, seven (78%) were weaned from ECMO to conventional ventilation. Repair of the diaphragmatic defect was performed an average of 3.8 days later; none of these patients had severe pulmonary hypertension postoperatively, and all survived. Two could not be weaned before repair, one of whom had a complex congenital heart defect. This patient died. The other patient had repair on ECMO because of intrathoracic gastric volvulus. Severe blood loss prompted decannulation, and the patient died. One patient who was placed on bypass was transferred 10 days after having had repair elsewhere (at 4 hours of age). Pulmonary hypertension did not resolve, and the postmortem examination showed alveolar capillary dysplasia, with focal misalignment of the pulmonary vessels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Repair of congenital diaphragmatic hernia after weaning from extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. 773 64

Congenital anomalies of the digestive system represent a complicated topic concerning many medical specializations. The goal of this article is to describe two cases of children with mesenterium commune. First was an infant (5.5 months old female) who died shortly after being admitted to hospital with acute bronchitis, vomiting and diarrhoea. The autopsy revealed the cause of death--volvulus of the entire small intestine and the first portion of the large intestine with haemorrhagic infarsation of the intestinal wall in an infant with congenital anomaly of intestinal fixation--mesenterium commune. Second case was a 2.5 years old female after two heart surgeries, with pulmonary hypertension, who died suddenly at home. The cause of death was volvulus of a portion of the small intestine with haemorrhagic infarsation of the intestinal wall and also mesenterium commune. Congenital malpositions of the intestine originate due to malrotation and malfixation of the intestine during prenatal and early postnatal period. This wide range of the individuals developmental disorders always result in a condition where the topographical findings in the abdominal cavity are not as commonly found. Abnormally positioned intestines cannot develop a normal mesentery and are prone to volvulus, which represents the most serious complication with acute abdominal symptoms and when diagnosed late, it can lead to sudden death. Whilst performing autopsies such cases are rarely seen. However in forensic medicine and also in clinical practice it is important to consider intestinal malposition as a cause of acute abdomen.
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PMID:[Two sudden deaths of children with mesenterium commune -- a case report]. 2597 Dec 28