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Authors :
Chantal Maurage
M Larchet
S. De Napoli
M Hermier
S. Ategbo
Christophe Faure
F. Huet
Michèle Scaillon
Anne Breton
Olivier Goulet
J.-L. Giniès
C Despres
B Roquelaure
P Tounian
Isabelle Paquot
Alain Dabadie
J.-J. Baudon
Source :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences. 44:953-959
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1999.

Abstract

Our aim was to collect a large number of cases to characterize clinical presentation, outcome, and prognosis of chronic intestinal pseusoobstruction in children. We conducted a retrospective multicenter study that included children treated for chronic intestinal pseusoobstruction defined as recurrent episodes of intestinal obstruction with no mechanical obstruction, excluding Hirschsprung's disease. In all, 105 children, 57 boys and 48 girls, were studied, including five familial forms. Prenatal diagnosis was made in 18 patients. Eighty patients were less than 12 months old at onset; the disease began at birth for 37 patients. The most frequent signs were abdominal distension, vomiting, and constipation. Megacystis was noted in myopathies (7 cases), neuropathies (10 cases) and unclassified forms (13 cases). For all but three cases (two patients with CMV infection, one with Munchhausen-by-proxy syndrome), the associated diseases and disorders could not account for chronic intestinal pseusoobstruction as a secondary disorder. At least one full-thickness biopsy from the digestive tract was studied for 99 patients. The diagnosis recorded was visceral neuropathy in 58 cases, visceral myopathy in 17 cases, and uncertain or normal biopsy results in 24 cases. Seventy-eight children were fed intravenously, and only 18 were able to be fed orally throughout their illness. Seventy-one patients underwent surgery during their illness, and 217 surgical procedures, a mean of 3 per patient, were performed. Ostomy was the most performed procedure. Follow-up continued in 89 patients for 3 months to 16 years (mean 85 months). Forty-two patients were still fed by parenteral (39 patients) or enteral nutrition (3 patients) at the time of the study. Eleven patients died between the age of 1 month and 14 years 7 months.

Details

ISSN :
01632116
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4a9422fddfb079fee4b6e511991e5db0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1026656513463