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

A case of ileocolic intussusception, associated with mid-gut volvulus and malrotation with bowel necrosis is reported. There is evidence to suggest that the intussusception preceded the volvulus.
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PMID:Intussusception, volvulus and malrotation. 386 74

Thirteen children aged 2 to 16 years have had a subtotal resection of small bowel, following a mid-gut volvulus in 10 cases. All children are still alive, and their growth was normal; 36 cumulative patient-years of parenteral nutrition and 11 years of constant rate enteral nutrition were performed. In 7 cases, where residual small bowel varied between 30 to 120 cm, termination of all artificial nutritional support was possible at a mean of 30 months after intestinal resection. On the other hand if resection was near total with less than 20 cm remaining, life long dependence on parenteral nutrition is unavoidable unless intestinal transplantation becomes feasible; with cyclic parental nutrition at home, their quality of life is near normal.
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PMID:[Extensive resection of the small intestine in children]. 392 95

Colonic pseudo-obstruction (Ogilvie's syndrome) may occur in surgical patients, particularly those who have had orthopedic or blunt trauma, have uremia or diabetes, have complex metabolic or cardiac failure, have metastatic cancer involving the lymph nodes and neural tissue, or are addicted to narcotics. Although a single true cause has not been identified by fulfilling Koch's postulates, the clinical pattern has been recognized in a variety of surgical patients, and this pattern must be distinguished from true obstruction of the colon. Tumor or internal hernia may constitute an obstruction, but the important differential diagnosis of cecal volvulus must be excluded. Ischemic colitis may be confused with Ogilvie's syndrome or may follow it. Gangrene, infarction, and perforation may ensue as colon diameter increases and particularly if cecal distention reaches above 14 cm. This arbitrary number for cecal dilatation should not be awaited before treatment is instituted if signs of devitalization of the gut or peritoneal signs have developed in the patient. Treatment has changed recently with the widespread application of colonoscopy. Endoscopy is helpful in relieving distention but may also be dangerous in the patient with a massively distended colon, particularly at the level of the thin-walled cecum. Colonoscopy also appears to be associated with a high rate of treatment failure and recurrence. Surgical decompression may take the form of cecostomy or may require exteriorization or resection of the colon if infarction has occurred. A series of 12 patients has been presented. The patients were all referred to a single surgeon in a university medical center over a 4 1/2 year period with clinical patterns not suggestive of a common cause but a similar clinical evolution of Ogilvie's syndrome. The prognosis for such patients in whom the complication is recognized early and in whom decompression is performed endoscopically or surgically is encouraging. If recognition is late and particularly if perforation and gangrene result, mortality is nearly 50 percent.
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PMID:Colonic pseudo-obstruction in surgical patients. 397 Mar 26

Necrotizing enterocolitis is an uncommon but dangerous disease in premature infants. Ten cases, seen over a three-year period at the Stanford University Medical Center, represented an incidence of 0.4 percent. The patients, six of whom died, derived from a general population, in contrast to the large series of patients reported in the literature in which the incidence was from 0.9 percent to 3.7 percent.(3-6)The initial symptoms-rapid respiration, periodic breathing, lethargy and irritability-were identical to those which occurred in numerous infants who had respiratory disease. Subsequent symptoms (abdominal distension, in 100 percent; vomiting, 80 percent; apneic spells, 70 percent; jaundice, 70 percent; guaic-positive stools, 60 percent) were those of nonspecific acute abdominal disease. The radiologist first made the diagnosis in 90 percent of cases. Interstitial air in the wall of the gut and the retroperitoneum, and portal vein gas were the most diagnostic radiographic features. Barium contrast studies were not helpful, and in one case led to the erroneous diagnosis of small bowel volvulus. Plain abdominal radiographs must be taken of all premature infants with symptoms of nonspecific acute abdominal disease. If the radiographs are negative, but symptoms continue, they should be repeated at frequent intervals, for early diagnosis is critical to institution of proper therapy.
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PMID:Neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis. Clinical and radiological features. 481 93

A hypothesis suggested in this paper is that pigbel, or enteritis necroticans was a common disease in mediaeval Europe when human habitats, food hygiene, protein deficiency and periodic meat feasting formed the basics of village life as they do in many Third World cultures today. Based on the Papua New Guinea experience with pigbel, it is suggested that health authorities should look closely at the epidemiology of the acute surgical abdomen in such communities. Enteritis necroticans may be the important predisposing lesion to mid-gut volvulus, jejunal and ileal ileus and other forms of small bowel strangulation in communities where protein deprivation, poor food hygiene, epochal meat feasting and staple diets containing trypsin inhibitors co-exist. Such human habitats occur in Central South America, Western Pacific, Asian and South-East Asian cultures. Isolated outbreaks of necrotising enteritis have been reported from Uganda, Malaysia and Indonesia but as yet no systematic epidemiological studies of the prevalence of small bowel strangulations have been described in the surgical literature of Third World countries. Now that enteritis necroticans is preventable by vaccination such studies should be undertaken.
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PMID:Pigbel in Papua New Guinea: an ancient disease rediscovered. 630 98

The advent of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) has made survival beyond infancy possible for large numbers of patients who have sustained massive small intestinal loss due to a variety of intraabdominal catastrophes. However, the quantity and quality of life have been limited by the development of late sequelae due both to the protracted use of TPN and the long-term complications of foreshortening of the gut. To determine to what extent the morbidity and mortality of short-bowel syndrome (SBS) may have improved over the last 10 years, we reviewed our experience since 1973 with patients losing more than 50% of total small intestinal mass in infancy. The etiologies of SBS in the 16 study patients were necrotizing enterocolitis (6), midgut volvulus (5), multiple atresias (3), gastroschisis (1), and congenital SBS (1). Overall survival was 81%; total small intestinal length (SIL) at the time of diagnosis was 44.2 +/- 7.9 cm in survivors and 30.3 +/- 7.8 cm in nonsurvivors, probability values not significant. Although no patient survived without an ileocecal valve whose total SIL was greater than 20 cm, the three deaths in this series were not related directly to the SIL, but to end-stage liver disease resulting from TPN-associated cholestasis. Among the survivors, adaptation to enteral feedings required 13.8 +/- 2.5 mo, during which time weaning from TPN occurred; weight at adaptation was 6.87 +/- 1.32 kg.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Morbidity and mortality of short-bowel syndrome acquired in infancy: an update. 644 Sep 65

Six infants with short-gut syndrome refractory to medical management underwent isoperistaltic colon interposition (length 11.7 +/- 3.1 cm.). The abdominal catastrophes that required extensive intestinal resection were: volvulus (3), necrotizing enterocolitis (2), and gastroschisis with intestinal atresia (1). No infant had another major congenital anomaly. The average trial of attempted medical therapy prior to colon interposition was 5.5 +/- 3.6 months. There was no perioperative mortality or morbidity associated with the colon interposition. Following the colon interposition, three infants were weaned from total parenteral nutrition (TPN) in 3 +/- 1 months and all survived. In contrast, three infants could not be withdrawn from TPN and they died secondary to complications of TPN (2 from sepsis and 1 from hepatic failure). Long-term survival was associated with a greater length of small bowel remaining after the initial resection (51 +/- 12 cm v 35 +/- 24 cm), colon interposition at a younger age (3 +/- 1 months v 8 +/- 3.5 months), and a shorter duration of medical management prior to colon interposition (2.8 +/- 0.8 months v 6.7 +/- 5.0 months). All survivors are now tolerating a regular diet and having one to four formed stools per day. Normal somatic growth and developmental milestones are being achieved. The follow-up period is from 24 to 84 months. Our experience with the colon interposition in the patient with short gut syndrome has led us to conclude that when a reasonable trial of medical management has failed, a colon interposition is a safe and effective adjuvant to treatment.
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PMID:Colon interposition: an adjuvant operation for short-gut syndrome. 644 Sep 66

The morphology of the body wall and the gut in the midbody region of adult male and female Loa loa originating from patients in Gabon was studied by transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The cuticle of the dorsal and ventral regions consists of ten layers. In the lateral regions the cuticle is thicker and includes two additional layers. The thin hypodermis contains numerous transhypodermal fibres. A row of median cells is situated between the syncytia in each lateral chord. No intracellular bacteria were observed. The cross-sections of each of the four muscle sectors are comprised of approximately 12 muscle cells of the coelomyarian type. The plasm of the gut cells contains large vacuoles and several mitochondria. The intestinal wall surrounds a wide lumen filled with material which occasionally contains cellular structures. The morphology of L. loa is compared with that of adult Onchocerca volvulus and Brugia malayi. The gut of the adult L. loa has the typical nematode morphology, which might be an indication of its normal function in nutrition. The multilayered cuticle with the rather smooth surface, and the prominent muscles correspond to the migratory activity of this filaria.
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PMID:Electron microscope study of the body wall and the gut of adult Loa loa. 659 30

Simulium quadrivittatum Loew (Diptera: Simuliidae), a man-biting black fly, was shown, for the first time, to be capable of supporting development of Onchocerca volvulus Leuckart (Nematoda: Filarioidea) from microfilariae to third-stage (infective) larvae. The black flies were collected in Chiriqui Province, Panama and transported alive to Guatemala, where they were allowed to feed on a human subject infected with O. volvulus. Samples of these flies were dissected over an 11-day period to assess morphogenesis of the parasite. Vigorously motile microfilariae were recovered from the mid-gut during the first 24 hours postfeeding; second-stage larvae were found in the thoracic musculature on day 4; and fully developed third-stage larvae were obtained from the cephalic capsule by day 10. This rate of larval development is similar to that observed in Guatemalan S. ochraceum. Onchocerciasis is not known to occur in Panama. The results of the present study direct attention to a potential public health hazard there and possibly elsewhere in Central America.
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PMID:Morphogenesis of larval Onchocerca volvulus in the Panamanian black fly, Simulium quadrivittatum. 673 72

One is tempted to believe that volvulus in elderly patients on many occasions may be preceded by inactivity and pseudomegacolon. Owing to psychiatric problems, chronic illness, or institutionalization, the patient is more likely to be subjected to treatment with sedatives and psychotropic drugs, causing decreased neuromuscular function of the gut. The basic principles in treating the volvulus are releasing the volvulus, deciding whether a nonoperative or an operative procedure should be employed, and treating complications. As far as surgical management is concerned, several techniques have been suggested, some of which are still controversial. Colonoscopy appears to have become an important method of treatment for volvulus with clearly established indications. Oddly enough, already hospitalized patients are occasionally subjected to delayed attention for volvulus. Therefore, physicians responsible for the care of geriatric patients should be alerted by even fairly mild symptoms of distention, abdominal pain, vomiting, and constipation. Clinical evaluation, including routine films of the abdomen, may avert a major catastrophe.
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PMID:Colon volvulus and the geriatric patient. 707 92


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