Intussusception Flashcards
definition of intussusception
Condition in which one part of the intestine folds into the other part causing obstruction in a process called TELESCOPING
how many cases occur in infants under one
2/3rd of all cases of intussusception
intussusception
is the most common cause of intestinal obstruction in infants and young children
nearly all cases occur at
the ileo-caecal region where the ileum folds into the caecum
most common cause
most cases are idiopathic but are associated with risk factors such as having previous intussusception, having a sibling who has had intussusception or intestinal malrotation
if babies the most common cause
lymphoid hyperplasia, when a baby gets a GI infection (rotavirus, norovirus), the peters patches in the intestine enlarge and can serve as a leading point
other cause is
mockers diverticulum which is an abnormal out pouching of GI tissue from the ileum into the perineum, occasionally the diverticulum can invert and become a leading point
symptoms of intussusception
- colicky abdominal pain which worsens on peristalsis
- abdominal guarding
- on palpation a hard sausage shaped mass can be palpated in the right hypochondriac and there is emptiness in the right lower quadrant (dance sign)
- initially causes non-billuos vomiting, but when obstruction occurs it becomes billous
- red current jelly like stool
why does the classical stool occur
there is increased pressure on the walls of the trapped bowel which causes ischaemia and then infarction, the infarction causes the sloughing off of the intestinal mucosa, blood and mucous causing the classic red current jelly like stool
diagnosis
- ultrasonography is used as screening as it has a false negative rate close to zero however, if it is positive you still require a contrast enema
signs on ultrasonography
- target sign
- psuedokidney sign
gold standard diagnostic investigations
contrast enema
management of intussusception
- IV fluids and nasogastric decompression for all
- therapeutic enema (hydrostatic or pneumatic), the only absolute contra-indication is intestinal perforation which requires surgery