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Minerva Pediatrica 1995-Jun

[Intestinal intussusception in children].

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A Baracchini
G Chiaravalloti
S Quinti
A Rossi
T Favili
C Ughi
M Ceccarelli

Keywords

Abstract

Enteric intussusception is one f the most frequent causes of acute abdomen in early childhood, with an incidence of 1.3-2/1000 children born and higher frequency from the third to the twelfth month. Primary intussusception is related to predisponsing factors such as peristalsis disorders or Peyer's patch hypertrophy induced by viral infection. Secondary intussusception is due to organic injury in the intestinal wall. The most involved sites are the terminal ileum and the ileocecum, the most frequent type is ileocolic intussusception. Many clinical forms exist, including acute enteric intussusception with its pathognomonic triad intermittent abdominal pain, emesis and rectal bleeding and the atypical form with a neurological presentation, where sopor, myosis and muscular atonicity are dominating, Intussusception can also present in a subacute or chronic form with a slow and apsecific onset. In a retrospective investigation we examined 30 cases of intussusception in children hospitalized at the Pediatric Clinic of Pisa from the 1960s up to today. Our patients (16 males and 14 females) were aged between one month and two years. Clinical presentations resulted in; typical forms (60%), atypical forms (16%), subacute forms 13%) and recurrent forms (10%). Clinical suspicion was confirmed either by the presence of blood observed during rectal exploration, which is a pathognomonic sign, or by the opaque enema which led to recovery by means of hydrostatic reduction in 40% of the cases. The remaining patients (60%) underwent surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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