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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Alimentary tract duplications are unusual anomalies that may require surgical intervention in the neonate, infant, and occasionally in the older child. The clinical presentation of patients with alimentary tract duplications includes bleeding, abdominal pain, intussusception, and
respiratory distress
, or it may be an incidental finding on either abdominal examination or chest x-ray. A review of 96 patients with 101 duplications seen over the last 37 years is reported herein. Twenty-one duplications were confined to the thorax; three were thoracoabdominal, and 77 were abdominal. Seventy-four patients presented as infants less than 2 years of age, and 22 patients were older. Ectopic gastric mucosa was found in 21 duplications, and pancreatic tissue was found in five. Seventy-five duplications were cystic and 26 were tubular. Ultrasonography, computed tomography (CT), and myelography are helpful diagnostic tools. Ninety-four of the 96 patients underwent surgical management for their duplications. One duplication was found at necropsy, and one patient was asymptomatic and did not undergo operation. A single death occurred in a 2-day-old infant who had intrauterine
volvulus
and meconium peritonitis. Management was based on the age and condition of the patient, the location of the lesion, whether it was cystic or tubular and communicating with the true intestinal lumen, and whether it involved one or more anatomic locations. Generally, total excision was preferred, but staged approaches were sometimes necessary.
...
PMID:Surgical management of alimentary tract duplications. 291 61
Gastric
volvulus
is a rare cause of
respiratory distress
and vomiting in neonates. This diagnosis was suspected in a 4 week old baby with acute
respiratory distress
accompanied with vomiting, from the results of an esophagogastroduodenal radiological examination. At operation a gastric
volvulus
was confirmed, associated with an anatomical malformation: absence of gastrosplenic omentum predisposing to gastric
volvulus
with mesenterio-axial rotation. Gastropexy was followed by an uncomplicated postoperative course. A literature review confirmed rarity of this affection and raised the problem of causes of repeated vomiting in the newborn and premature infant. An often incriminated lesion is gastric plicature, a radiological notion, whereas gastric
volvulus
is accompanied necessarily by an altered uptake of contrast in the stomach. Acute
volvulus
must be distinguished from other types of
volvulus
, notably that observed during hiatus hernia. Early diagnosis allows rapid surgical treatment by anterior gastropexy as recommended by most authors.
...
PMID:[A case of acute gastric volvulus in a newborn infant]. 360 92
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
A review of the world literature has revealed only 11 cases of gastric
volvulus
symptomatic in the first month of life. To those 11, this report adds two cases of intrathoracic organoaxial gastric
volvulus
that were observed in the first week of life and were managed operatively. Gastric
volvulus
should be considered in the differential diagnosis of newborn infants initially observed to have persisting regurgitation, vomiting, and
respiratory distress
. The diagnosis can be made with plain thoracoabdominal roentgenograms and confirmed by upper gastrointestinal contrast studies. Prompt surgical management is indicated and should include reduction and fixation of the stomach and repair of associated anomalies. The results of early surgery are excellent.
...
PMID:Gastric volvulus in the newborn. 741 51
Acute gastric volvulus occurred in nine infants and one older child during the past 19 years; all patients had an associated left diaphragmatic anomaly. There were seven examples of eventration of the diaphragm, two of giant hiatal hernia and one Bochdalek hernia. Nine of the ten patients presented with vomiting and one with acute
respiratory distress
. The gastric
volvulus
was mesenteroaxial in eight patients and organoaxial in two. Operative treatment consisted of repair of the diaphragmatic anomaly and gastric fixation in eight patients. Gastric fixation alone was performed in one patient. A single patient died preoperatively and had gastric necrosis at postmortem examination. Of the nine patients treated operatively, all remain alive and well without recurrence. Acute gastric volvulus should be considered in any infant presenting with unexplained vomiting in association with a left diaphragm anomaly, and once diagnosed, immediate operation is mandatory.
...
PMID:The pediatric diaphragm in acute gastric volvulus. 814 14
The main symptom of the congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is the
respiratory distress
due to the pulmonary hypoplasia and the persistence of foetal pulmonary circulation. Sometimes the CDH appears outside of the neonatal period with respiratory symptoms, abdominal pain and seldom with intestinal obstruction. A case of CDH presenting with intrathoracic
volvulus
is reported. This case shows that tendency of delayed repair until the newborn has been recovered, require more attention because the good condition of the patient can be changed not only by the pulmonary hypoplasia and the persistence of the foetal pulmonary circulation but also by the symptoms of the intrathoracic gut complications.
...
PMID:Congenital diaphragmatic hernia and intrathoracic intestinal volvulus. 829 83
Acute gastric volvulus in infancy is a rare disorder and a surgical emergency. Prompt clinical suspicion and radiological assessment are essential for this life-threatening condition. We report a 3-month-old female case, admitted for an initial suspicion of an intestinal obstruction. She presented unproductive retching,
respiratory distress
, epigastric distension and lethargy. It was not possible to introduce a naso-gastric tube. A radiological contrast study showed an occluded cardio-esophageal junction without passage of barium, two gastric fluid levels and a horizontally positioned stomach occupying the inferior portion of the left hemithorax, suggesting a left diaphragmatic hernia. Laparotomy revealed an acute mesenterico-axial gastric
volvulus
with a left posterolateral diaphragmatic hernia. The stomach
volvulus
was untwisted, the diaphragmatic defect was repaired after reduction of the herniated contents and no gastropexy was done. At 3 and 6-months follow-up examination the infant was asymptomatic and thriving.
...
PMID:Acute gastric volvulus and congenital posterolateral diaphragmatic hernia. 916 58
This report describes a 3-month-old infant with acute severe
respiratory distress
in whom a diagnosis of congenital diaphragmatic hernia with tension gastrothorax and gastric
volvulus
was made. A review of the pathophysiology, clinical presentation, differential diagnosis, diagnostic evaluation, and treatment of congenital diaphragmatic hernia is presented.
...
PMID:Congenital diaphragmatic hernia with gastric volvulus presenting as an acute tension gastrothorax. 992 95
Gastric
volvulus
(GV) is a rare condition in infants. The aim of this study was to define the management strategies of infants with GV based on their clinical and radiologic features. The medical records of 13 infants with a radiologically confirmed diagnosis of GV were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were divided into two groups according to the type of treatment (surgical vs conservative). Abdominal radiographs and upper gastrointestinal contrast studies allowed an unequivocal diagnosis in both groups. Group 1 included 3 infants with acute GV and 2 with chronic, intermittent secondary GV. Three patients had associated diaphragmatic defects, 1 had an ileocolic intussusception, and 1 had hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. The main presenting symptoms were vomiting, dehydration,
respiratory distress
, and abdominal pain and distention in acute cases and vomiting and failure to thrive in chronic cases. A laparotomy was required in all 5 infants with no recurrence of symptoms. Group 2 included 8 infants with idiopathic chronic GV, who were managed nonoperatively with gradual improvement of symptoms over 12 months. Based on our study, we conclude that: (1) laparotomy can be reserved for patients with either acute or chronic secondary GV; (2) conservative treatment is both safe and effective in infants with chronic idiopathic GV; and (3) routine gastropexy for all patients with a radiologic diagnosis of GV appears to be overtreatment.
...
PMID:Infants with radiologic diagnosis of gastric volvulus: are they over-treated? 1172 47
We describe an adult patient with gastric
volvulus
caused by a congenital diaphragmatic hernia. Anaesthetic management was complicated by cardiovascular instability,
respiratory distress
and unexpectedly difficult intubation.
...
PMID:Anaesthetic management of acute gastric volvulus in an adult. 1248 89
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