Ileal Atresia Secondary to Intrauterine Segmental Volvulus

태아 소장 부분염전에 의한 회장 무공증

  • Park, Woo-Hyun (Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, Keimyung University Dongsan Medical Center) ;
  • Park, Sang-Man (Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, Keimyung University Dongsan Medical Center) ;
  • Choi, Soon-Ok (Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, Keimyung University Dongsan Medical Center)
  • 박우현 (계명대학교 동산병원 소아외과) ;
  • 박상만 (계명대학교 동산병원 소아외과) ;
  • 최순옥 (계명대학교 동산병원 소아외과)
  • Published : 1995.11.15

Abstract

A 2-day-old male (Premie, Large for gestational age(LGA), Intrauterine period(IUP) 33 weeks, birth weight 2,955 gram) was transferred with marked abdominal distention, bilious return via the orogastric tube, respiratory difficulty, and generalized edema (hydrops fetalis). He was born by cesarean section to a 36 year-old mother. Antenatal ultrasonogram at IUP 31 weeks demonstrated multiple dilated bowel loops suggestive of intestinal obstruction. There was no family history of cystic fibrosis. Simple abdominal films disclosed diffuse haziness and suspicious fine calcifications in the right lower quadrant. Barium enema demonstrated a microcolon. Sweat chloride test was not available in our institution. At laparotomy, there noted 1) a segmental volvulus of the small bowel with gangrenous change, associated with meconium peritonitis, 2) an atresia of the ileum at the base of the volvulus, and 3) the terminal ileum distal to the volvulus was narrow and impacted with rabbit pellets-like thick meconium. These findings appeared to be very similar to those of a complicated meconium ileus. In summary, the ileal atresia and meconium peritonitis seemed to be caused by antenatal segmental volvulus of the small intestine in a patient with probable meconeum ileus.

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