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

The incidence of congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is about 4.8/10,000 live births. Its typical clinical presentation is respiratory distress occurring immediately after birth or in the first few hours or days of a child's life. It is characterized by a high mortality rate. Exceptionally, CDH can occur at an older age, its symptoms then frequently reflecting gastrointestinal obstruction or mild respiratory symptoms. In such cases CDH presents a far more complex diagnostic problem. The paper presents the cases of two girls without typical symptomatology, aged 5.5 and 10 years, in whom CDH was detected incidentally upon thorough physical examination and chest x-rays. Further radiographic evaluation, which included barium contrast study and spiral computed tomography, confirmed the suspicion of a left-sided posterolateral diaphragmatic hernia with associated intestinal malrotation. Surgical intervention conclusively confirmed a diaphragmatic defect at the site of Bochdalek's foramen in both cases. The vital capacity of the older girl, which was low before the surgery (VC 1.66 L; 69% of predicted), was significantly increased a month after the surgical treatment (VC 2.25 L; 92% of predicted). The generally expressed view that the clinical onset of CDH is rare after the neonatal period seems to be erroneous. Some papers report on the clinical presentation of CDH after the neonatal period in as many as 13%-14% of infants and young children suffering from CDH. Infants and young children with a delayed clinical occurrence of CDH can present with respiratory or gastrointestinal symptomatology. Children presenting with gastrointestinal symptoms have been shown to be significantly older than those presenting with respiratory symptoms. In older children and adolescents, the symptoms and signs of CDH, which include acute hernial incarceration, nausea, recurrent vomiting, diarrhea, obstipation, acute gastric dilatation, subcostal pain, failure to thrive and recurrent chest infections, habitually present a significant diagnostic problem. Diagnostic errors are mainly due to the fact that the possibility of CDH in that age is totally neglected. The most recurrent diagnostic misinterpretations in such cases are pneumonia or massive pleuropneumonia, empyema, pneumothorax, lung cysts and bullae, and gastric volvulus. Thus, whenever a child presents with uncommon respiratory or gastrointestinal symptoms and an anomalous chest x-ray, a differential diagnosis of CDH should be considered. Otherwise, an accurate diagnosis in both young and older children will most probably be only reached at autopsy. In conclusion, the presented cases corroborate the finding that CDH in older children may present with scarce symptoms, mostly gastrointestinal, or may be altogether asymptomatic and unrecognized until as late as adolescence. However, when a diagnosis of CDH has been established, albeit asymptomatic, it must be promptly treated surgically in order to prevent complications, such as strangulation or bowel perforation, and thus avert a potentially fatal outcome. The size itself of the herniac foramen is unlikely to be a determining factor at the time of clinical presentation of CDH. Surgical occlusion of CDH may in older children result in an improved vital capacity, as such cases are rarely associated with major pulmonary hypoplasia. Complications resulting from surgical treatment of CDH in older children are more likely to occur in the gastrointestinal system, as a consequence of the associated bowel malrotation and inadequate bowel fixation. Finally, these two cases corroborate the diagnostic value of accurate history taking and thorough physical examination.
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PMID:[Congenital diaphragmatic hernia in older children]. 1550 87

We report on a 10-year-old girl who presented with worsening pain and anorexia after blunt trauma to the abdomen. Contrast-enhanced CT of the abdomen was performed, and a counterclockwise rotation of the superior mesenteric vein around the superior mesenteric artery was seen. An upper gastrointestinal (UGI) series with small-bowel follow-through demonstrated a normally located duodenal-jejunal junction. This is the first case report of a counterclockwise barber-pole sign seen by CT with UGI that was negative for malrotation or volvulus.
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PMID:Counterclockwise barber-pole sign on CT: SMA/SMV variance without midgut malrotation. 1593 17

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

Cecal volvulus is uncommon in the West and represents only 1% of cases of intestinal occlusion in adults. We describe three cases of intestinal occlusion due to cecal volvulus in two women aged 74 and 61 years old and a man aged 81 years old with multiple pathological antecedents. The patients had pain, abdominal distension and absent feces. They were treated surgically with right hemicolectomy and mechanical ileocolonic anastomosis. The postoperative course was favorable in the two women but the man died. The two female patients are currently able to perform appropriate social and occupational activities for their age and underlying diseases.
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PMID:[Intestinal occlusion due to cecal volvulus]. 1642 Aug 67

Patients with intractable chronic constipation should be evaluated with physiologic tests after structural disorders and extracolonic causes have been excluded. Conservative treatment options should be tried excessively. If surgery is indicated subtotal colectomy with IRA is the treatment method of choice. However, segmental resection may be a good option for isolated megasigmoid, sigmoidocele or recurrent sigmoid volvulus. In general patients with GID should not be offered any surgical options because of their anticipated poor results. Moreover, patients with psychiatric disorders should be actively discouraged from resection as they tend to have poorer prognosis. Patients must be counseled that preoperative pain and/or bloating will likely persist even if surgery normalizes bowel frequency. Patients with associated problems may be better served by having a stoma without resection as both a therapeutic maneuver and a diagnostic trial. Colectomy is no option to treat pain and/or abdominal bloating.
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PMID:Surgery for constipation. 1713 90

In this case report, we describe a pregnant female patient at 27 weeks' gestation with a rare complication of volvulus. Her initial symptom was acute cramping pain of the lower right abdomen. Surgical intervention was performed under the impression of peritonitis. Pathologic diagnosis revealed volvulus of the mid ileum. The remainder of her pregnancy was uneventful. The physiologic changes of pregnancy may predispose the parturient to bowel obstruction due to compression of the gravid uterus against the intestine. If volvulus is suspected, then emergent surgery should be performed. Delays in treatment may result in septic shock and even death. We present this case to remind obstetricians of such rare causes of acute abdomen during pregnancy.
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PMID:Volvulus in pregnancy: a diagnostic dilemma. 1738 80

Diaphragmatic herniation has been recognized as a complication of unrepaired diaphragmatic defects after left ventricular assist device explantation and cardiac transplantation. We believe this to be the 1st report of diaphragmatic herniation that resulted in gastric volvulus in a cardiac transplant recipient. The presentation, diagnosis, and treatment of this potentially fatal condition are discussed herein. Nine months after removal of a Thoratec HeartMate II left ventricular assist device and orthotopic cardiac transplantation, the patient presented with intermittent upper abdominal and lower chest discomfort of 3 weeks' duration. Physical examination was notable for fullness in the upper abdomen. Plain radiographs and computed tomographic scans of the chest and abdomen without contrast were unexceptional. Two weeks later, the patient's pain began to worsen rapidly, and an upper gastrointestinal barium study revealed partial herniation of the stomach into the chest and omento-axial gastric volvulus without luminal obstruction. The patient underwent uncomplicated laparotomy for repair of the diaphragmatic defect and reduction of the herniated stomach. This case highlights the need for increased awareness of diaphragmatic herniation as a complication of unrepaired diaphragmatic defects so that diagnosis is not delayed, and underscores the importance of primary repair of all such defects to prevent future complications.
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PMID:Gastric volvulus after ventricular assist device explantation and cardiac transplantation. 1742 Aug 7

Although urolithiasis is common in spinal cord injury patients, it is presumed that the predisposing factors for urinary stones in spinal cord injury patients are immobilization-induced hypercalciuria in the initial period after spinal injury and, in later stages, urine infection by urease-producing micro-organisms, e.g., Proteus sp., which cause struvite stones. We describe a patient who sustained C-7 complete tetraplegia in a road traffic accident in 1970, when he was 16 years old. Left ureterolithotomy was performed in 1971 followed by left nephrectomy in 1972. Probably due to adhesions, this patient developed volvulus of the intestine in 1974. As he had complete tetraplegia, he did not feel pain in the abdomen and there was a delay in the diagnosis of volvulus, which led to ischemia of a large segment of the small bowel. All but 1 ft of jejunum and 1 ft of ileum were resected leaving the large bowel intact. In 1998, suprapubic cystostomy was performed. In 2004, this patient developed calculus in the solitary right kidney. Complete stone clearance was achieved by extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. Stone analysis: calcium oxalate 60% and calcium phosphate 40%. Metabolic evaluation revealed hyperoxaluria, hypocitraturia, and hypomagnesiuria. Since this patient had hyperoxaluria, the stool was tested for Oxalobacter formigenes, a specific oxalate-degrading, anerobic bacterium inhabiting the gastrointestinal tracts of humans; absence of this bacterium appears to be a risk factor for development of hyperoxaluria and, subsequently, calcium oxalate kidney stone disease. DNA from the stool was extracted using the QIAamp DNA stool Mini Kit (Qiagen, Chatsworth, CA). The genomic DNA was amplified by polymerase chain reaction using specific primers for oxc gene (developed by Sidhu and associates). The stool sample tested negative for O. formigenes. The patient was prescribed potassium citrate mixture; he was advised to avoid oxalate-rich food, maintain recommended levels of calcium in his diet, and take live bio-yogurt. Two months later, 24-h urinary oxalate decreased from 0.618 to 0.411 mmol/day; 24-h urine citrate increased from 0.58 to 1.10 mmol/day. Six months later, an oxalate absorption test was performed. The patient swallowed a capsule, soluble in gastric juice, containing 50 mg (0.37 mmol) sodium [13C2]oxalate corresponding to 33.8 mg of [13C2]oxalic acid. The amount of labeled oxalate, excreted in urine, was measured by a gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric assay. Oxalate absorption, expressed as the percentage of the labeled dose recovered in the 24-h urine after dosing, was 8.3% (reference range: 2.3-17.5%). In addition to other conventional measures, oral administration of O. formigenes or lactic acid bacteria mixture to promote bacterial degradation of oxalate in the gut, and thus combat hyperoxaluria, may play a role in prevention of calcium oxalate kidney stones.
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PMID:Hyperoxaluria, hypocitraturia, hypomagnesiuria, and lack of intestinal colonization by Oxalobacter formigenes in a cervical spinal cord injury patient with suprapubic cystostomy, short bowel, and nephrolithiasis. 1761 9

In the treatment of humans, ivermectin (Mectizan((R))), a semi-synthetic macrocyclic lactone, is now primarily used as a rapid microfilaricide. The drug has several other benefits, however, and these have recently been investigated in five states in south-eastern Nigeria, where there have been mass treatments with ivermectin, for the control of Onchocerca volvulus, for more than 10 years. Between the January and December of 2005, 3125 adult onchocerciasis patients (each aged >/=20 years and known to have at least one clinical sign of onchocerciasis) were enlisted, clinically examined and interviewed. Relevant data were collected in the interviews, using a structured, pre-tested questionnaire, and in personal and focus-group discussions. Overall, 612 (19.6%) of the subjects reported that they had had nodules that had disappeared following repeated doses of ivermectin, although only 83.8% of the 612 attributed their nodule clearance to ivermectin (the other 16.2% being unsure of the cause). A larger percentage of the subjects (24.6%) reported that they had expelled intestinal helminths following the last round of ivermectin treatment (i.e. been dewormed). Other side-benefits reported in the study were improved vision (11.7% of subjects), reversal of secondary amenorrhea (4.5%), increased appetite (22.3%), reduction in arthritic or other musculo-skeletal pain (7.9%), reductions in the severity of body itching (18.5%) and skin rash (17.3%), darkening of leopard skin (6.6%), improved libido in men (6.6%), and clearance of head lice (4.5%). If, via health education, the local communities could be made more aware of the side-benefits of ivermectin treatment, the sustainability of the on-going programme of community-directed treatment with ivermectin (CDTI) in south-eastern Nigeria would probably be improved.
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PMID:The varied beneficial effects of ivermectin (Mectizan) treatment, as observed within onchocerciasis foci in south-eastern Nigeria. 1787 78

The choice of material and technique for repair of inguinal hernias is broad. The mesh plug technique has become one of these techniques. The local complications of this technique are well known and include entrapment and damage of nervous and reproductive structures causing pain and even infertility. Migration of the mesh recently has become evident. We found a few cases of migrating mesh plug in the literature. We report a 76-year-old male patient who presented during admission for a neurosurgical procedure. His hospital course was complicated by migrating mesh eroding into the small intestine presenting as a small bowel obstruction. During exploratory laparotomy, a small bowel volvulus was found and reduced along with resection of the bowel-mesh complex. We discuss and review this technique's complications, including a 9-year review of adverse events reported to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
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PMID:Small bowel volvulus caused by migrating mesh plug. 1787 87


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