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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The records of 28 patients with duodenal and 31 with jejunoileal intestinal atresia or stenosis were studied.
Vomiting
and abdominal distention were the most prominent symptoms; an unusual colon may be present in jejunal as well as ileal obstruction and is not pathognomonic for ileal obstruction.
Intestinal atresia
is associated with a high incidence of preterm babies but with a low incidence of intrauterine growth retardation. Fifty-three infants were operated upon; the overall survival rate was 79 per cent. The high percentage of mortality in duodenal obstruction is due to associated malformations. Theories of the pathogenesis of intestinal atresia do not seem to fit current clinical and experimental evidence in all patients. Possibly, different factors play a role in separate situations.
...
PMID:The pathogenesis of intestinal atresia. 115 28
In this retrospective study carried out covering the period, 1978-1991, 62 neonates were seen, diagnosed and treated for intestinal atresia which included: duodenal atresia and stenosis, small bowel atresia and atresia of large bowel. Locations of obstruction were duodenal in 17 patients, jejunal in 25 patients, jejuno-ileal in 5 and colon in two. Duodenal atresia was noted in 9 infants and duodenal stenosis due to annular pancreas, Ladd's bands with malrotation of bowel in 8. Associated anomalies which were observed were anorectal malformations in 2 and malrotation in 2 infants. Birth weights ranged from 1450 gm to 3000 gm. Prematurity was recorded in 11 infants. Diagnosis of intestinal atresia in our patients was made clinically and radiologically.
Intestinal atresia
in neonates was differentiated from other causes of obstruction such as Meconium Ileus, Hirschsprung's disease, neonatal volvulus, rectal atresia in anorectal malformations. Treatment of infants with intestinal atresia was surgical. Surgical techniques used depended on pathological findings. In 36 patients, complications such as functional obstructions with
vomiting
and failure to thrive, malabsorption, aspiration, bronchopneumonia, sepsis were observed. Overall mortality rate in our cases was 25 (41.9%) out of 62 patients.
...
PMID:Intestinal atresia and stenosis as seen and treated at Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi. 818 36
Over a 13-year period, 24 children with intestinal atresia were managed at the Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria.
Intestinal atresia
ranks as the second most common cause of neonatal intestinal obstruction (after anorectal malformation) in our hospital. Five children had duodenal obstruction (two atresia, two duodenal webs, one annular pancreas), 17 had jejunoileal atresia, and two had colonic atresia. Fourteen were boys, and 10 were girls (M:F: 1.17:1). The median age at presentation to the surgeon was 6 days (range: 1 day-12 years). The most common presenting features were bilious
vomiting
and abdominal distension. Six patients did not pass meconium within the first 24 h of birth. The median weight at presentation was 2.6 kg (range: 1.1 kg-5.0 kg). Seven patients (four with jejunoileal atresia and three with duodenal obstruction) had associated congenital anomalies. Diagnostic investigation was plain abdominal x-ray, showing double-bubble gas shadows in duodenal atresia and varying degrees of air-fluid levels in jejunoileal and colonic atresias. An upper gastrointestinal series was done in three patients and a barium enema in one. Retrocolic duodenojejunostomy was done for all patients with duodenal atresia and annular pancreas, duodenotomy and web excision for those with duodenal webs, and resection with end-to-end anastomosis for those with jejunoileal atresia. One child with atresia involving the whole ileum and the colon had a jejunorectal anastomosis, while the other child with colonic atresia had caecostomy followed later by ileorectal anastomosis. Ten neonates died, giving a mortality rate of 41.7%. Mortality from intestinal atresia is still high in our environment, due mainly to lack of neonatal intensive care facilities.
...
PMID:Intestinal atresia: management problems in a developing country. 1513 87