Acute intussusception: a classic clinical picture?


Autoria(s): Fanconi S.; Berger D.; Rickham P.P.
Data(s)

1982

Resumo

57 patients with acute intussusception were admitted to the Children's Hospital Zurich between 1972 and 1979. All were treated surgically. One died, 7 needed a bowel resection, 9 intussusceptions were difficult and 32 easy to reduce. The retrospectively reviewed data show that the classic symptomatology, beginning suddenly in a healthy male (60%) under 3 years of age (91%) with attacks of colicky pain (81%), vomiting (93%), a palpable abdominal mass (72%) and rectal bleeding (72%), appears during the course of illness or may not be present at all. This leads to misdiagnosis, wrong treatment and worsening of the pathology. Blood per rectum, the most typical symptom, was present in the first hours of illness in only 5%, vomiting in 44% and colicky pain in 33% of the patients. A high degree of awareness is therefore necessary to diagnose intussusception during the first hours of illness, and particular stress must be laid on the accuracy of the diagnosis because reducibility and resection rate depend directly on the duration of the symptoms.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_A5C3FD658B62

isbn:0018-022X

pmid:7153057

isiid:A1982PL15300005

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Helvetica paediatrica acta, vol. 37, no. 4, pp. 345-52

Palavras-Chave #Acute Disease; Adolescent; Age Factors; Child; Child, Preschool; Humans; Infant; Intussusception; Retrospective Studies; Seasons; Switzerland
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article