Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon

We present the case of a neonatal patient with colonic atresia who was transferred to our hospital for perforated peritonitis. In this case report, we describe the location of perforation and the treatment provided for the preservation of the ileocecum.A 2-day-old boy presented to our hospital in a...

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Main Authors: Toshio Sawai, Shogo Zuo, Yasuhiro Kuroda, Hiromichi Kanehiro, Masayuki Sho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-09-01
Series:Journal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213576620301810
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spelling doaj-57d00355630f47cf825af245be91725b2020-11-25T03:52:54ZengElsevierJournal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports2213-57662020-09-0160101547Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colonToshio Sawai0Shogo Zuo1Yasuhiro Kuroda2Hiromichi Kanehiro3Masayuki Sho4Corresponding author.; Nara Medical University, Department of Surgery, 840 Shijouchou, Kashihara City, Nara, 634-8522, JapanNara Medical University, Department of Surgery, 840 Shijouchou, Kashihara City, Nara, 634-8522, JapanNara Medical University, Department of Surgery, 840 Shijouchou, Kashihara City, Nara, 634-8522, JapanNara Medical University, Department of Surgery, 840 Shijouchou, Kashihara City, Nara, 634-8522, JapanNara Medical University, Department of Surgery, 840 Shijouchou, Kashihara City, Nara, 634-8522, JapanWe present the case of a neonatal patient with colonic atresia who was transferred to our hospital for perforated peritonitis. In this case report, we describe the location of perforation and the treatment provided for the preservation of the ileocecum.A 2-day-old boy presented to our hospital in a state of shock, with continuous bilious vomiting and abdominal tension. His abdominal X-ray showed free and intestinal air; he was diagnosed with ileal atresia with perforation.The operative findings showed the perforation to be on the ascending colon just next to cecum and the atresia to be on the transverse colon. We were unable to complete a primary anastomosis. To preserve the ileocecum, an ileostomy was performed on the ileum 10 cm away from the ileal end. The perforation was repaired, and the colostomy was performed on the anal side of the atresic colon. Since 22 days of age, stool had been injected into the colostomy several times per day. The ileostomy was closed, and the atresic colon was anastomosed at the age of 77 days.This case suggests that the perforation site is not always near the site of atresia. When the perforation is near the ileocecum, performing an ileostomy can preserve the ileocecum from resection.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213576620301810Colonic atresiaPerforationIleocecumPreservationNeonate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Toshio Sawai
Shogo Zuo
Yasuhiro Kuroda
Hiromichi Kanehiro
Masayuki Sho
spellingShingle Toshio Sawai
Shogo Zuo
Yasuhiro Kuroda
Hiromichi Kanehiro
Masayuki Sho
Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon
Journal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports
Colonic atresia
Perforation
Ileocecum
Preservation
Neonate
author_facet Toshio Sawai
Shogo Zuo
Yasuhiro Kuroda
Hiromichi Kanehiro
Masayuki Sho
author_sort Toshio Sawai
title Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon
title_short Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon
title_full Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon
title_fullStr Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon
title_full_unstemmed Staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon
title_sort staged repair of colonic atresia with non-contiguous perforation of the proximal colon
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports
issn 2213-5766
publishDate 2020-09-01
description We present the case of a neonatal patient with colonic atresia who was transferred to our hospital for perforated peritonitis. In this case report, we describe the location of perforation and the treatment provided for the preservation of the ileocecum.A 2-day-old boy presented to our hospital in a state of shock, with continuous bilious vomiting and abdominal tension. His abdominal X-ray showed free and intestinal air; he was diagnosed with ileal atresia with perforation.The operative findings showed the perforation to be on the ascending colon just next to cecum and the atresia to be on the transverse colon. We were unable to complete a primary anastomosis. To preserve the ileocecum, an ileostomy was performed on the ileum 10 cm away from the ileal end. The perforation was repaired, and the colostomy was performed on the anal side of the atresic colon. Since 22 days of age, stool had been injected into the colostomy several times per day. The ileostomy was closed, and the atresic colon was anastomosed at the age of 77 days.This case suggests that the perforation site is not always near the site of atresia. When the perforation is near the ileocecum, performing an ileostomy can preserve the ileocecum from resection.
topic Colonic atresia
Perforation
Ileocecum
Preservation
Neonate
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213576620301810
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