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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pairs of mongrel dogs received orthotopic total small bowel allografts. Half were treated with the immunosuppressive agent cyclosporin A and the other half were not. Ten untreated dogs survived a mean of 12.5 days (range from 7 to 25 days). They lost up to 30% of their initial body weight and rejection with hemorrhagic necrosis was usually the cause of graft failure. The mean survival of 11 dogs treated with cyclosporin A was 90.6 days (range 9 to 286 days) with early deaths being due to pneumonia or
volvulus
. Intestinal mucosa appeared normal, but there was some smooth muscle hypertrophy. Reconnection of lymph vessels was complete in all dogs examined more than 21 days after allografting. Two dogs survived for 203 and 221 days, respectively, and one dog remains alive and well 287 days after operation. The long-term survivors remained healthy, with steady body weights, formed stools, normal plasma protein values and
xylose
absorption curves that did not differ from those of autografted dogs. Roentgenography after a barium meal and follow-through study showed normal mucosa. The transit time was around 60 minutes (normal 150 minutes). Late, acute episodes of rejection occurred in two dogs, when blood levels of cyclosporin A were low (less than 400 ng/ml). Bowel mucosa showed ulceration and villous atrophy, with lymphoid infiltration, leading to malabsorption as a terminal event. Cyclosporin A is effective in increasing the duration of survival in dogs with small bowel allografts while maintaining essentially normal bowel structure and good function.
...
PMID:Structure and function of small bowel allografts in the dog: immunosuppression with cyclosporin A. 705 64
The patient is a 2-year-old boy born with gastroschisis and midgut
volvulus
that left him dependent on total parenteral nutrition (TPN). At 11 months of age, a Bianchi procedure was performed increasing the total length of bowel from 72 cm to 130 cm. Although he appeared to have sufficient bowel length, he continued to have malabsorption and could only tolerate 10% of his caloric requirement enterally. A barium study found significant dilatation of the lengthened small bowel. At 23 months, we performed a novel bowel lengthening procedure that we have reported previously in an animal model. The serial transverse enteroplasty (STEP) operation increased the 83 cm of dilated and previously lengthened bowel to 147 cm, making the total small bowel length 200 cm. The patient tolerated the procedure well and began to have semisolid bowel movements. Small intestinal absorptive capacity measured by
D-xylose
absorption showed a substantial increase from 5 to 12 mg/dL (normal range, >20), implying improved but not completely normal small bowel function. This case shows that the STEP procedure increases intestinal length, can be used after a prior Bianchi, and may result in improved intestinal absorptive capacity. The STEP procedure should be considered a surgical option for children with short bowel syndrome.
...
PMID:Serial transverse enteroplasty for short bowel syndrome: a case report. 1466 85
We determined the abomasal emptying rates of Holstein-Friesian cows at different stages of lactation, with left displaced abomasum (LDA), or immediately after surgical correction of LDA or abomasal
volvulus
(AV).
D-xylose
(0.5 g/kg body weight [BW], 50% solution) was injected into the abomasum in healthy cows (group 1, 4-7 days in milk [DIM], n = 7; group 2, 90-120 DIM, n = 7; group 3, > 300 DIM, n = 7) and in cows with LDA (n = 10; group 4).
D-xylose
was injected into the abomasum during right flank laparotomy in cows with LDA (n = 22; group 5) and cows with AV (n = 15; group 6). The time to maximal serum
D-xylose
concentration was used as an index of emptying rate. The abomasal emptying rates for cows in groups 1, 2, and 3 were similar, whereas emptying was slower in cows with LDA and in cows after surgical correction of LDA or AV. The abomasal emptying rate of cows with LDA was slowed to a greater extent immediately after surgery, when compared to the rate obtained before surgery. There was no difference in abomasal emptying rate immediately after surgical correction between cows with LDA or AV. The results indicate that the increased incidence of LDA in the first month of lactation is not associated with an intrinsic decrease in abomasal emptying rate in healthy cows. Our findings also demonstrate that surgical correction further slows the emptying rate in cows with LDA.
...
PMID:Use of the D-xylose absorption test to measure abomasal emptying rate in healthy lactating Holstein-Friesian cows and in cows with left displaced abomasum or abomasal volvulus. 1635 89