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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three patients had recurrences of left-sided colonic
volvulus
after allegedly total resections of redundant sigmoid loops. All three patients had chronic, acquired
megacolon
. Other instances of late recurrence of
volvulus
after sigmoidectomy are documented in the literature. Sigmoidectomy may be an inadequate operation for sigmoid
volvulus
in younger patients and/or in patients with severe chronic
megacolon
. The decision to perform an interval operation and the selection of the type of operation must take this into account.
...
PMID:Recurrence of volvulus after sigmoidectomy. 49 2
The results of surgical treatment of 106 patients with sigmoid colon
volvulus
against the background of
megacolon
are set forth. The total lethality constituted 19%. The resection of the sigmoid colon was carried out upon 62 patients: one-step operation was performed upon 45 patients (of them 11 died--24.4%), 17 patients underwent the obstructive resection, of them 4 patients died (23.5%). In case of sigmoid colon gangrene lethality, following one-step resection of the sigmoid colon, constituted 26.5%, with the viable gut lethality was 18%. The detorsion of the sigmoid colon was carried out upon 44 cases of mesosigmoidopexy; the lethality was 11.4%.
...
PMID:[Radical surgical treatment of sigmoid volvulus]. 67 83
Etiologic and physiopathologic aspects of
volvulus
of the sigmoid colon in Brazil are presented. It is believed that sigmoidal
volvulus
in Brazil is a frequent complication of
megacolon
caused by Chagas' disease, differing in some characteristics from
volvulus
found in other countries. A review of 230 cases treated between 1938 and 1974 in the Surgical Department of Hospital das Clinicas, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, is presented. The successive variations used to treat this disease occurred parallel to those introduced in the surgical treatment of uncomplicated
megacolon
. From the results, the following treatment is recommended: endoscopic emptying in cases without clinical, roentgenographic or endoscopic signs of intestinal ischemia. Laparotomy should be performed when a complicated
volvulus
is suspected or when it is not possible to empty the loop. When a simple
volvulus
is found, the loop should be untwisted and the gaseous contents siphoned off by menas of a rectal catheter. When there is necrosis of the colon, the Hartmann operation is recommended. It is important to submit patients to a definitive treatment of the
megacolon
soon after endoscopic emptying or surgical detorsion of the
volvulus
, since recurrences following these measures are frequent.
...
PMID:Volvulus of the sigmoid colon in Brazil: a report of 230 cases. 81 36
A review of the surgical and autopsy records from two general hospitals in La Paz, Bolivia, discloses an incidence of colon and rectal disease, excluding hemorrhoids, of 0.6 per cent (138 of 22,361 surgical cases) and 2.5 per cent (16 of 640 consecutive autopsies). Acquired megacolon complicated by
volvulus
represented more than half of all cases in the surgical series. Ulcerative colitis, diverticular disease, and neoplastic polyps represented less than 10 per cent of the cases of colonic disease. Only ten cases of carcinoma of the colon were seen, whereas five cases of granulomatous colitis or ileocolitis were detected in the same surgical material. Among sixty-four lesions of the rectum, so-called retention polyps accounted for 54.5 per cent of the cases, with carcinoma next in frequency (25 per cent), and the remainder being different varieties of inflammatory conditions. In the autopsy material almost half of the cases were infectious conditions, followed by congenital malformations and complicated acquired
megacolon
. No case of diverticular disease of the colon or neoplastic polyps was seen, and there was only one case of cancer of the large bowel. Because of the high incidence of acquired
megacolon
and the low incidence of cancer, ulcerative colitis, adenomatous polyps, and diverticular disease of the colon, possible etiopathogenic factors of these conditions are discussed in comparison with their incidence in other developed and developing countries of the world.
...
PMID:Diseases of the colon and rectum in Bolivia. 113 Jun 11
A syndrome presenting as gross abdominal distension and diagnosed as acquired
megacolon
was observed in five adult female long-tailed macaques. Gastrointestinal signs included diarrhea, mucus in the stool, anorexia, and failure to pass stool, with repeated episodes of extreme abdominal distension and accumulation of gas and feces in greatly enlarged colons. Medical management was unsuccessful. A partial colectomy with a standard end-to-end colonic anastomosis was performed to remove the section of distended colon in each animal. Histologically, affected colons had degeneration and fibrosis, primarily in the longitudinal layer of the lamina muscularis. Hemograms, serum chemistries, and histopathologic features were not diagnostic of a specific etiology for
megacolon
. Four of five animals had undergone at least one obstetrical surgery. Two of these had the first episode of colonic distension within 3 days postoperatively. Intra-abdominal adhesions were noted during exploratory surgery in all animals. Three of five had colonic
volvulus
observed during colectomy. Recovery post-colectomy was uneventful and animals remained free of clinical signs of
megacolon
.
...
PMID:Partial colectomy for treating acquired megacolon in long-tailed macaques. 166 44
Dilated colon is provoked by obstructing lesions, toxic
megacolon
or colonic pseudoobstruction. The obstructing lesions of the colon are colonic
volvulus
, inflammatory bowel disease with stenosis or colonic cancer. Toxic megacolon is more often caused by I.B.D. and rarely by infectious diseases. Etiological diagnosis is possible after clinical and radiological evaluation. Colonoscopy is always indicated, except in toxic
megacolon
. Balloon dilatation of strictures, palliative treatment of colonic carcinoma by Laser procedures, reduction of colonic
volvulus
and aspiration of colonic pseudoobstruction are the principal indications of therapeutic colonoscopy in the non surgical treatment of dilated colon.
...
PMID:[Acute dilatation of the colon]. 179 37
Acute abdomen was the presenting manifestation of pseudomembranous colitis in six men who had previously been treated with antibiotics and presented with abdominal distention, pain, fever, and leukocytosis with absent or mild diarrhea. Plain abdominal radiographs revealed
megacolon
in two, combined small and large bowel dilation in three, with one of them showing volvuluslike pattern, and isolated small bowel ileus in one. Emergency colonoscopy was performed successfully in all patients and revealed pseudomembranes in five and nonspecific colitis in one. All patients had positive latex test results for Clostridium difficile, and two tested positive for cytotoxicity. All patients were treated with IV metronidazole, resulting in resolution of symptoms and abdominal findings. In addition, two patients underwent colonoscopic decompression with improvement. Endoscopically, complete resolution of the pseudomembranes occurred at 4 weeks in all cases. No patient had a recurrence. It is concluded that (a) pseudomembranous colitis may present as abdominal distention mimicking small bowel ileus. Ogilvie's syndrome,
volvulus
, or ischemia; (b) in such cases, emergency colonoscopy is safe and useful for diagnosis and therapeutic decompression and may obviate the need for surgery; and (c) treatment with IV metronidazole is effective. Colitis due to C. difficile should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute abdomen in patients previously treated with antibiotics.
...
PMID:Acute abdomen as the first presentation of pseudomembranous colitis. 161 51
Chagas' disease is an endemic clinical entity caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, a parasite that is transmitted to humans by the hematophagic Triatominae insects. It affects several million persons in Latin America, mostly in Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Bolivia.
Megacolon
, the most common complication of intestinal trypanosomiasis, results in severe constipation, for which surgery is indicated. A variety of procedures have been proposed for the correction of this disabling condition including sigmoidectomy, abdominal rectosigmoidectomy, left colectomy, and subtotal colectomy. On long-term follow-up, however, these operations have proved to be inadequate in a significant number of cases, apparently due to preservation of the dyskinetic rectum which continues to act as a functional obstacle to the progression of the fecal bolus. On the other hand, pull-through operations, which include the removal of all or almost all of the dyskinetic rectum, or the exclusion of the rectum, as in the Duhamel-Haddad operation, have been demonstrated to be superior. The abdominoperineal endoanal pull-through resection with delayed colorectal anastomosis and the Duhamel-Haddad operation are the most accepted procedures in Brazil and other Latin American countries; their technical details are illustrated. Functional results are satisfactory. Anal continence is normal in the vast majority of cases and sexual disturbances are rare. Routine treatment of 2 main complications--fecaloma and
volvulus
of the sigmoid colon--are discussed.
...
PMID:Surgery of chagasic megacolon. 190 31
Plain abdominal radiographs are rarely diagnostic when the patient presents with acute abdominal pain. Emergency physicians, therefore, should be aware of the appropriate indications and limitations of abdominal films in this setting and should be skilled in their interpretation to exclude the rare cases of pneumoperitoneum, pneumobilia, hepatic-portovenous gas, small and large bowel obstruction, toxic
megacolon
,
volvulus
and intramural gas.
...
PMID:Emergency abdominal radiography. 191 51
Thirty-six major abdominal operations were performed on 35 Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) patients (33 men, two women). Twenty-two elective operations were indicated for diagnosis of abdominal or retroperitoneal mass (6), incomplete bowel obstruction (5), intra-abdominal infection (4), biliary symptoms (3), thrombocytopenia (3), and toxic
megacolon
(1). Fourteen emergency operations were for perforated viscus or peritonitis (11), massive gastrointestinal bleeding (2), and cecal
volvulus
(1). In 5 of 22 (23%) elective operations AIDS was unknown to the treating physicians until diagnosed by the surgical pathology; in contrast, all 14 emergency operations were in patients who had a known diagnosis of AIDS. The operative findings were related to AIDS in 34 of 36 (94%) operations. Cytomegalovirus was the most common pathogen, isolated or identified microscopically in 11 patients (eight emergency and three elective operations). Mycobacterial infections presented as retroperitoneal adenopathy or splenic abscess in six patients. Non-Hodgkins lymphoma was the most common malignancy found, presenting as an abdominal mass (4), bowel obstruction (3), or with gastrointestinal bleeding (2). Kaposi's sarcoma was diagnosed at laparotomy in four patients. The 1-month operative mortality rate for elective operation was 9% (2 of 22) and 46% (6 of 13) in emergencies. Postoperative complications included 1 reoperation for sepsis caused by inadequately resected CMV colitis; 1 pancreatic fistula; 1 wound dehiscence, and 2 minor wound infections.
...
PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Indications for abdominal surgery, pathology, and outcome. 255 44
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