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Query: UMLS:C0153429 (Meckel's diverticulum)
1,196 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Meckel's diverticulum is the most common anomaly of the gastrointestinal tract. It is usually asymptomatic, but it can cause rectal bleeding and bowel obstruction in both children and adults. Different investigative methods are used to diagnose Meckel's diverticulum. When a Meckel's diverticulum is suspected to cause rectal bleeding in children, the first choice of examination is the Meckel scan. Angiography is an alternative method in adults. Demonstration of a Meckel's diverticulum using barium meal examination is rare, but enteroclysis has been stated to be the most accurate method in detecting Meckel's diverticulum and other focal abnormalities of the small bowel.
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PMID:[Meckel's diverticulum---clinical picture, diagnosis and treatment]. 218 70

Meckel's diverticulum is considered the most common diverticulum of the small intestine. Of the various complications associated with this condition, intestinal obstruction is one of the most common. Rapid diagnosis and treatment are essential. Resection of the obstructing element is the treatment of choice. The authors report on their recent experience with two patients with Meckel's diverticulum, both of whom had intestinal obstruction as the presenting complication. The authors discuss the etiology and various complications of Meckel's diverticulum and present information on the frequency of associated mortality and morbidity.
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PMID:Meckel's diverticulum: report of two cases and review of the literature. 219 41

Complications arising from Meckel's diverticulum are uncommon in adults and are seldom, if ever, seen in the elderly. When they do occur in adults, intestinal obstruction or inflammation is the usual mode of presentation, hemorrhage being much less common. The patient described in this case report was 78 yr old, presented initially with iron deficiency anemia and, later, developed severe acute hemorrhage. The cause of the hemorrhage was ulceration at the tip of an invaginated Meckel's diverticulum. The ulceration was not peptic in origin, as is usually the case in similar presentations in children, no ectopic oxyntic mucosa being detected in the diverticulum of our patient. In previous reports, invaginated Meckel's diverticula have always been accompanied by intussusception, and abdominal pain has been an important part of the symptom complex in such patients. Our patient had no abdominal pain, and no intussusception was noted at surgery. This case emphasizes the need for considering a Meckel's diverticulum as the source of acute or chronic hemorrhage, irrespective of the patient's age. The utility of radionuclide blood pool imaging in arriving at a diagnosis in these cases is discussed.
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PMID:Recurrent hemorrhage from an invaginated Meckel's diverticulum in a 78-year-old man. 230 41

For a period of 12 years (1977-1988) 64 children with Meckel's diverticulum (32 boys and 32 girls) have been operated. In early childhood (younger than 3 years) were 14.1 per cent; most of the others (59.4 per cent) were in school age. Complicated Meckel's diverticulum had 31.2 per cent of the children, the most common complication being intestinal obstruction--65 per cent (intussusception 25 per cent, strangulation 25 per cent and volvulus 15 per cent). Acute diverticulitis was found in 25 per cent of the complicated cases. In the clinical picture of these complications lacked cause-pathognomonic symptoms. The Meckel's diverticulum was removed in 60 children (93.8 per cent) the operation was cuneiform resection of the diverticulum in 96.6 per cent of the operated children. Only one child (1.7 per cent) had postoperative complication. All others were discharged from the clinic in full surgical repair. Practical inferences were made, based on analysis of the clinical case material.
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PMID:[Meckel's diverticulum in childhood]. 239 87

Hernial strangulation of Meckel's diverticulum (Littre's hernia) is a rare anatomoclinical form. It represents 10% of all complications of Meckel's diverticulum (8.8% of our cases), and complications like hemorrhage, perforation and diverticulitis are fairly frequent. Four cases of Littre's hernia are presented: two males and two females, with an average age of 67 years (range 50-83 years), representing 0.08% of all the inguinal-crural hernias operated in the department. The clinical manifestations were those of intestinal obstruction because a mixed type Littre's hernia was involved, with compromise of the diverticulum and its intestinal loop. Preoperative diagnosis is unlikely in strangulation without disturbances in the intestinal transit and, in fact, is even less likely if it is accompanied by obstruction. The diagnosis is thus almost always intraoperative. The correct treatment is surgery after restoring the patient's hemodynamic equilibrium. Simple and/or loop diverticulectomy via herniotomy, herniolaparotomy or laparotomy are debated. We think that this disorder can generally be resolved using the inguinal approach, as in any strangled hernia, with the technical option of using a larger, more comfortable and safer approach in cases of important obesity and/or deterioration of the loop (necrosis, perforation). In elderly patients with uncomplicated Littre's hernia and Meckel's diverticulum, abstention from diverticular exeresis may be justifiable. Of the four patients, the first two died from cardiogenic shock and pulmonary embolism, respectively; the last two evolved well (except for a wound abscess).
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PMID:[Hernial strangulation of Meckel's diverticulum: Littre's hernia. Apropos of 4 cases]. 261 52

We have described an unusual case of Crohn's disease in a Meckel's diverticulum with both diverticulitis and intestinal obstruction in an elderly man.
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PMID:Crohn's disease of a Meckel's diverticulum causing diverticulitis and small bowel obstruction. 267 61

Twenty-six surgically documented cases of Meckel's diverticulum and related abnormalities at the National Taiwan University Hospital during a 7-year period (1980 through 1987) are reviewed. According to clinical presentation, they were classified into five groups: (1) hemorrhage in 10 cases, (2) inflammation in 4 cases, (3) intestinal obstruction in 4 cases, (4) umbilical abnormalities in 6 cases, and (5) incidental finding on laparotomy in 2 cases. The percentage of umbilical abnormalities was 23%. In contrast, the 2 cases found incidentally represented 8% of 26 cases in this series. The diagnosis of umbilical abnormalities is obvious. For cases with Meckel's diverticuli, however, we detected their complications (hemorrhage, inflammation and intestinal obstruction) only preoperatively except for the hemorrhagic group in whom 6 among 10 cases were proved to have ectopic gastric mucosa by Meckel's scan. Other aspects about the clinical presentation, method of diagnosis, strategy for management are reviewed and discussed.
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PMID:Meckel's diverticulum and related umbilical abnormalities: review of 26 cases. 278 34

Sixteen cases of Meckel's diverticulum are reported, 14 of them detected during emergency operative intervention for acute surgical abdomen and 2 during planned operation. The complicated forms of Meckel's diverticulum were 10: acute diverticulitis 4 (25 per cent), intestinal obstruction 4 (25 per cent), neoplastic process 1 (6.25 per cent), intestinal hemorrhage 1 (6.25 per cent). Symptom-free were 43.75 per cent of the diverticuli. The clinical symptoms of acute diverticulitis resembled much those of acute appendicitis. The method of choice for its surgical management is cuneiform resection of the intestinal wall at the site of the diverticulum and transverse reconstruction of the intestinal lumen. Cancer of the diverticulum requires extended intestinal resection.
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PMID:[The pathology of Meckel's diverticulum]. 279 8

The blood supply to a Meckel's diverticulum exists either within the small bowel mesentery, or within a separate mesodiverticular band. The latter is associated with bowel obstruction. It is a rare source of hemorrhage. The case report describes hemoperitoneum resulting from blunt trauma-induced disruption of a mesodiverticular band.
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PMID:Traumatic hemoperitoneum due to a Meckel's mesodiverticular band: case report. 291 69

Report of a case of Hirschsprung's disease associated with Meckel's diverticulum, gall stones and trisomy 21, in an 18 year old woman, operated for a bowel obstruction due to a volvulus secondary to bowel distention. A brief review of the literature is presented on the association Hirschsprung's disease-trisomy 21.
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PMID:[Association of Hirschsprung disease, Meckel's diverticulum and gallbladder calculi in a young Down's syndrome patient]. 296 45


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