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

A 2(1)/2-year-old child was admitted to hospital with acute abdominal pain and vomiting. A single large air-fluid level without additional bowel gas was seen on plain abdominal radiography. At laparotomy organoaxial volvulus of the stomach was found and partial gastric resection performed. A single bubble appearance may indicate gastric volvulus.
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PMID:Acute abdomen due to gastric volvulus: diagnostic value of a single plain radiograph. 857 42

During pregnancy, intestinal obstruction due to sigmoid volvulus is extremely rare. Only 73 cases have been reported. A 24-year-old black woman, gravida 2, para 1, presented during Week 36 of an otherwise uneventful pregnancy, with intermittent abdominal pain and constipation, and no history of nausea, vomiting, fever, chills, previous medical problems, or prior abdominal surgery. Her previous pregnancy was a spontaneous vaginal delivery of a normal full-term neonate. On examination, she was afebrile, with abdominal tenderness. Laboratory studies revealed elevated WBC count of 13,500. She was admitted and given a Fleet enema, with no result or change in abdominal pain. Pain worsened; reexamination of her cervix revealed 3 cm dilation. After Pitocin augmentation, a viable male infant with Apgars of 7 and 9 was delivered. Postpartum, abdominal pain continued, with worsening abdominal distention. Radiograph revealed a massively distended colon. Physical examination 12 hours postdelivery indicated peritonitis. Exploratory laparotomy revealed volvulated, gangernous, massively distended sigmoid colon. The sigmoid colon was resected and Hartmann's colostomy performed. She was discharged on postoperative Day 4. Sigmoid volvulus complicating pregnancy is an uncommon and potentially devastating development that should be suspected with worsening abdominal pain and evidence of bowel obstruction. Prompt intervention is necessary to minimize maternal and fetal morbidity.
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PMID:Sigmoid volvulus in pregnancy. 861 67

A retrospective study of 50 consecutive patients with small-bowel volvulus complicating intestinal ascariasis is reported. The commonest presenting features were abdominal distension (44 patients) and abdominal pain (38 patients). Thirty-three patients presented with vomiting, of whom 8 vomited worms. Twenty-five patients presented with peritonitis. In 33 patients there was evidence of worm infestation on radiographs while volvulus was diagnosed radiographically in 16 patients. Thirty-two patients required emergency surgery, while 16 were observed for a mean of 2.6 days before surgery. Thirty-nine patients had gangrenous bowel that required resection. The overall mortality rate was 14.5% and all deaths were from the gangrenous group. The results show that volvulus complicating ascariasis still carries a high mortality and morbidity rate. We stress the importance of early detection and early operative intervention.
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PMID:Surgical management of worm volvulus. 862 87

Infants with intestinal malrotation present with bilious emesis and the diagnosis is generally obtained by an upper gastrointestinal barium study. Malrotation is suspected if the ligament of Treitz is not positioned to the left of the vertebral body. Barium enema may also be used to detect malrotation by noting the abnormal position of the cecum from its usual placement in the right lower quadrant, but this study is not as reliable due to the mobility of the cecum. Some infants may not have classic radiographic findings for malrotation, yet the contrast studies are not entirely normal. We recently treated two infants with recurrent vomiting whose UGI studies suggested intestinal malrotation. Laparoscopic exploration confirmed the diagnosis of malrotation. Laparoscopic correction (Ladd's procedure) of malrotation was carried out in one infant. The second infant underwent a traditional Ladd's procedure. The technique of laparoscopic Ladd's procedure is described. Laparoscopy may be used for the diagnosis and treatment of infants with intestinal malrotation. It may be especially helpful to verify the diagnosis in patients who do not have classic radiographic findings. Whether laparoscopy should be used in patients with midgut volvulus is debatable. Laparoscopic derotation of the volvulus in a setting where the bowel is markedly distended may be difficult and dangerous.
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PMID:Laparoscopic evaluation and treatment of intestinal malrotation in infants. 870 56

Vomiting is a nonspecific symptom and cyclic vomiting is a symptom complex that may result from a disorder of any major organ system. Children with cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS) need careful review and investigation at their earliest presentations to exclude potentially lethal abnormalities such as intestinal volvulus, metabolic disorders, and neurologic space-occupying lesions. The range of abnormalities that may present with features consistent with CVS includes gastrointestinal obstructive, inflammatory and motility abnormalities, pancreatic disease, metabolic disease (particularly the amino acid-opathies, organic acidurias, fatty acid oxidation defects, and acute intermittent porphyria), renal disease, epilepsy, migraine, and psychiatric disorders. Careful history taking will usually provide clues to these uncommon problems, but all children should undergo baseline assessment of gastrointestinal morphology and screening tests for renal and metabolic disease.
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PMID:Differential diagnosis of cyclic vomiting syndrome. 870 60

In infants with recurrent vomiting, and especially bilious vomiting, the algorithmic approach is to perform conventional barium upper gastrointestinal radiography to rule out malrotation and midgut volvulus, which are surgical emergencies. However, children with protracted vomiting and failure to thrive are candidates for medical treatment. These children are often evaluated by radionuclide gastric emptying studies to assess gastric emptying. Three patients are presented in whom the radionuclide gastric emptying study revealed the presence of a malrotation anomaly which had been undetected by antecedent barium gastrointestinal radiographic studies.
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PMID:Malrotation discovered during routine radionuclide gastric emptying study. 875 65

Upper gastrointestinal series are frequently obtained on children with abdominal pain and vomiting. If the ligament of Treitz (LOT) is in an equivocal position and not to the left of the spine at L1 or L2 it is important to determine the position and fixation of the cecum to assess the breadth of the mesenteric pedicle. Radiographic studies may not accurately accomplish this because of the changing position of the cecum. Laparoscopy can he used to determine the position of LOT and whether the cecum is fixed in the right lower quadrant. If the patient is judged to be at risk for volvulus (i.e., a shortened mesenteric pedicle) a Ladd's procedure can be accomplished laparoscopically with good long-term results. The use of the laparoscope is not advocated when acute volvulus is suspected.
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PMID:Laparoscopic Ladd's procedure and assessment of malrotation. 883 39

A baby boy had had transhiatal gastric transposition for wide gap esophageal atresia in another hospital. Postoperatively, repeated vomiting, chest infection, and frequent attacks of dyspnea developed. After reexploration, the cause was not identified and he was referred to the authors' institution. The diagnosis of iatrogenic organoaxial volvulus with gastric outlet obstruction was made because barium meal studies and nuclear isotope scanning showed persistent obstruction of the gastric outlet but upper endoscopy showed no stenosis and a flexible scope could be passed easily into the duodenum. The diagnosis was confirmed by thoracotomy. After full mobilization of the stomach, the gastroesophageal anastomosis was divided and the thoracotomy was closed. The stomach was reduced into the abdomen via laparotomy, and it was tubularized and rerouted retrosternally for anastomosis to the cervical esophagus. Since the operation the patient has been asymptomatic.
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PMID:Iatrogenic gastric volvulus during transposition for esophageal atresia: diagnosis and treatment. 893 47

Chilaiditi's sign is a radiographic term used when the hepatic flexure of the colon is seen interposed between the liver and right hemidiaphragm. When symptomatic, this is Chilaiditi's syndrome. We report a case of Chilaiditi's syndrome associated with transverse colon volvulus. A 64-yr-old male presented with abdominal pain, vomiting, and constipation. Barium enema demonstrated complete colonic obstruction, leading to operative decompression and right hemicolectomy. This is the second case in the English literature of transverse colon volvulus associated with Chilaiditi's syndrome. Colonic elongation and laxity of colonic and hepatic suspensory ligaments are the principal predisposing factors to these two entities.
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PMID:Transverse colon volvulus and associated Chilaiditi's syndrome: case report and literature review. 894 99

A study of one hundred and forty-two patients with acute intestinal obstruction over a period of ten years (January 1985-December 1994) at Wesley Guild Hospital was undertaken to determine the pattern and outcome of this problem in a tropical African population. There was a preponderance of males over females; ratio 1.7:1. Mean age was 33 years and over half of the patients were aged between two and 30 years. There was a second peak age incidence among elderly patients between 50-80 years. Abdominal pain, vomiting and constipation were common symptoms, while abdominal distension and tenderness were common clinical findings. Intraperitoneal adhesions were responsible in 41.5%; there was associated intestinal volvulus in 25.4% of the cases of intraperitoneal adhesions. In 16.9%, strangulated external hernia was responsible for acute intestinal obstruction. Small intestinal volvulus was encountered in 20 cases (14.1%) and associated with adhesion in 75% of the cases. Intussusception occurred in 14.1% of cases of which 70% of the patients were below the age of 15 years. In 15 (10.6%) patients, there were volvulus of the sigmoid colon, with 80% (12 patients) having gangrenous bowel segments. Ascaris were responsible in 3.5% of the patients and large bowel tumour in 2.8%. Other rare causes were internal hernia and ileal pseudo obstruction. Adhesiolysis and intestinal resection were the commonest operative procedures. Common complications were wound infection in 16.2%, postoperative fever in 10.6% and chest infection in 9.1%. A mortality rate of 8.4% was recorded.
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PMID:Changing pattern of acute intestinal obstruction in a tropical African population. 899 63


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