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Query: UMLS:C0153429 (
Meckel's diverticulum
)
1,196
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Amongst 876 cases suffering from ascariasis 662 cases were managed conservatively and 214 cases were treated by surgery. Surgical complications were found to be more common in males in the age group of 6-10 years. Principal clinical features included pain abdomen (99.54%), constipation (80.25%), vomiting (67.46%), abdominal distension (47.03%), palpable worm masses in abdomen (35.50%), visible peristalsis (27.63%), worms in vomitus (24.20%) and palpable worm clumps on rectal examination (20.09%). Principal clinical diagnosis were worm colics (48.74%), sub-acute
intestinal obstruction
(27.74%), acute
intestinal obstruction
(11.42%) and acute
intestinal obstruction
with strangulation (5.71%); rest of the cases included worm cholecystitis (2.63%), obstructive jaundice (1.71%), bile peritonitis (0.91%), intestinal perforation (0.68%) and acute appendicitis (0.46%). Surgical procedures performed were milking of worms (34.12%), resection anastomosis of small intestine (23.36%), enterotomy with removal of worms (16.36%), cholecystectomy with T-tube drainage (12.15%), cholecystectomy (8.41%), appendectomy (1.87%), resection anastomosis with excision of
Meckel's diverticulum
(1.40%), repair of intestinal perforation with peritoneal toilet (1.40%) and cholecystectomy with choledochoduodenostomy (0.93%). In surgically managed patients 35 cases died of septicaemia and in conservatively managed cases 3 died of encephalitis with an overall mortality of 4.34%.
...
PMID:Surgical manifestations and management of ascariasis in Kashmir. 140 71
A case of incomplete
intestinal obstruction
caused by a giant
Meckel's diverticulum
in a 13-year-old girl is reported. Short resection of the ileum with the diverticulum and end-to-end anastomosis was carried out. The possibilities of diagnosis and treatment as well as the controversial classification of this rare congenital anomaly are discussed.
...
PMID:Giant Meckel's diverticulum. 146 86
Twenty one surgically documented cases of
Meckel's diverticulum
in children treated at Kasturba Hospital, Manipal since 1981 are reviewed. Of them, 14 presented with
intestinal obstruction
, 2 with pain abdomen, 2 with Littre's hernia and 2 were found incidentally. Only one patient presented with gastrointestinal bleeding. The clinical profile of these patients is analyzed.
...
PMID:Meckel's diverticulum in children. 151 19
Congenital and acquired diverticula of the jejunum and ileum in the adult are unusual and occur in approximately 1 percent to 2 percent of the population. They are pulsion diverticula thought to be the result of intestinal dyskinesia. These lesions can produce a significant diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma. They are multiple in the jejunum and solitary distally and are characteristically found in 60- or 70-year-old males. The diagnosis may be confirmed with contrast studies of the small intestine, arteriography, or nuclear scan. Consider these disorders in patients with 1) unexplained gastrointestinal bleeding, 2) unexplained
intestinal obstruction
, 3) an unexpected cause of acute abdomen, 4) chronic abdominal pain, 5) anemia, or 6) malabsorption. Medical therapy is helpful in controlling diarrhea and anemia, while surgical therapy is reserved for hemorrhage, obstruction, perforation, or failure of medical management. Asymptomatic diverticula discovered on routine contrast studies need not be resected. At surgery, incidental diverticula should be removed when evidence of dilated, hypertrophied loops of small bowel with large diverticula is found. Intraoperative air distention will aid in diagnosis. Resection and primary anastomosis is the preferred treatment for non-Meckelian diverticula. Diverticulectomy is reserved for a
Meckel's diverticulum
without evidence of ulceration. An incidental
Meckel's diverticulum
should be removed in the presence of mesodiverticular bands or ectopic tissue. Removal of a
Meckel's diverticulum
is not advised in the patient with Crohn's disease but may be performed in the patient undergoing restorative proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis.
...
PMID:Clinical implications of jejunoileal diverticular disease. 158 62
Meckel's diverticulum
is the most common congenital abnormality of the small bowel; it occurs in approximately 2% of the population. Complications of
Meckel's diverticulum
include hemorrhage, usually associated with heterotopic tissue within the diverticulum, intussusception, development of benign or malignant neoplasms, and inflammation. Formation of one or more enteroliths within a diverticulum is rare. An extremely rare complication is mechanical small
bowel obstruction
secondary to extrusion of an enterolith from a
Meckel's diverticulum
(Meckel's stone ileus). A case of Meckel's stone ileus is described herein, with a review of the literature of this extremely rare complication.
...
PMID:Meckel's stone ileus. 160 94
Meckel's diverticulum
occurs in 2% of the population and may present at any age. Its management, when found incidentally at laparotomy, remains controversial, particularly in the pediatric population. From 1970 to 1989, a
Meckel's diverticulum
was discovered in 164 children at laparotomy. There were 120 boys and 44 girls with a mean age of 5.2 years (range, 0 to 18 years). Forty-seven cases were asymptomatic, representing an incidental finding at laparotomy, 25 were resected, and ectopic gastric mucosa was present in 7 specimens (28%). Three postoperative deaths (6%) that were not related to the resection and 2 complications (4%) (postoperative leak and wound infection) occurred in this group. Of the 117 symptomatic patients, 49 (42%) presented with
bowel obstruction
, 45 (38%) had rectal bleeding, 16 (14%) had diverticulitis, and 7 (6%) had umbilical pathology. Volvulus (20) and intussusception (19) were the most common causes of obstruction. Predisposing factors for
bowel obstruction
were fibrous bands to umbilicus or mesentery (37%) and ectopic mucosa (35%). Severe painless rectal bleeding occurred in 45 patients, 30 of whom (67%) required blood transfusion. A nuclear medicine Meckel scan was positive in 32 of 37 patients (85%). Contrast studies were not diagnostic; colonoscopy and gastroscopy ruled out other causes of bleeding. Patients with diverticulitis (16) presented with acute abdominal pain compatible with appendicitis. In the symptomatic group, ectopic mucosa was present in 61% of the resected specimens. Gastric (88%), pancreatic (7%), and gastric with pancreatic (3%) were the most common ectopic tissue. Postoperative morbidity and mortality for symptomatic patients was 8.5% and 0%, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Meckel's diverticulum in children: a 20-year review. 181 59
The diagnosis of
intestinal obstruction
caused by
Meckel's diverticulum
is difficult. The clinical evolution of the condition is subacute, with painful bouts occurring over several years and puzzling the clinicians. As a first step, explorative laparotomy solves the problem. Two cases show how difficult this decision is. Celioscopic surgery may be chosen in the future.
...
PMID:[Intestinal obstruction caused by Meckel's diverticulum in adults]. 189 2
Diverticulosis of the small bowel, complicated by enterolith formation with ensuing obturation obstruction, was recently documented in two patients. One patient had an enterolith formed within a
Meckel's diverticulum
; the other had an enterolith dislodged from an acquired diverticulum. Both patients presented with signs and symptoms of acute small
bowel obstruction
. Only 20 such cases of
bowel obstruction
secondary to jejunal enterolithiasis and five cases secondary to Meckel's enterolithiasis have been reported. The mechanism of obstruction may involve local encroachment or enterolith expulsion with distal
bowel obstruction
, although the latter is much more common. Optimally, enteroliths are broken up and milked into the proximal colon without incising the bowel. Alternatively, the enterolith may be milked proximally to a less edematous portion of bowel and an enterotomy may be performed. At times, the primary diverticulum is resected with the contained enterolith.
...
PMID:Enterolith intestinal obstruction owing to acquired and congenital diverticulosis. Report of two cases and review of the literature. 191 31
Calcified enteroliths as a cause of intermittent small
bowel obstruction
is an uncommon clinical entity. The pathophysiological mechanism involves stasis of intestinal contents and has been associated with
Meckel's diverticulum
, tuberculosis, and regional enteritis. This case describes prophylactic operative intervention in a symptomatic patient with enteroliths as a result of Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Enteroliths causing intermittent obstruction in a patient with Crohn's disease. 198 62
The ileosigmoid knot (ISK) is a rare cause of
intestinal obstruction
. Unfamiliarity with the condition could have disastrous consequence at surgery. Over the past 20 years, we have encountered seven cases. Analyzing the data gathered from these, and on reviewing the literature, we found it possible to arrive at a preoperative diagnosis in two patients. Four patients were women, two of whom developed the obstruction in the postpartum period. One of the males was found to have an inflamed
Meckel's diverticulum
included in the knotting. The symptoms and the clinical findings were nonspecific. The characteristic x-ray findings of a double closed loop obstruction, was seen in only three patients. Resection of gangrenous bowel with anastomoses was feasible in four. Unlike in other series, primary anastomosis of the large gut was undertaken. There were two deaths early in the series. Guidelines to the management have been suggested.
...
PMID:The ileosigmoid knot. 199 13
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