Therapeutic experience of type Ⅲ-b congenital intestinal atresia.
- Author:
Dong MA
1
;
Dengming LAI
1
;
Xiaoxia ZHAO
1
;
Shuqi HU
1
;
Chengjie LYU
1
;
Shoujiang HUANG
1
;
Qi QIN
1
;
Jinfa TOU
1
Author Information
1. The Children's Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, National Clinical Research Center for Child Health, Hangzhou 310052, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Child;
Humans;
Intestinal Atresia;
complications;
surgery;
therapy;
Intestines;
surgery;
Parenteral Nutrition;
Retrospective Studies;
Short Bowel Syndrome;
complications;
Treatment Outcome
- From:
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences
2019;48(5):487-492
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE:To summarize the clinical characteristics and treatment of type Ⅲ-b congenital intestinal atresia (CIA).
METHODS:The clinical data of 12 type Ⅲ-b CIA treated in the Children's Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine from January 2015 to December 2017 were analyzed retrospectively.
RESULTS:Of the 12 patients diagnosed as type Ⅲ-b CIA in operation, treatment was refused during operation by their parents in 2 cases. For one child, only the proximal intestine was partly resected in the first operation, dilatation and dysplasia of the duodenum was diagnosed and total duodenum was resected and sutured in the second operation, as the child had postoperative intestinal obstruction. For one child, due to the long distal normal intestine, distal apple-peel like intestine was partly resected without mesenteric reformation. For the rest 8 children total duodenum resection and mesenteric reformation were performed. During the postoperative follow-up, one case was early rejected for further treatment by parents, one case died from complex congenital heart disease, 5 cases had the complication of short bowel syndrome. All 8 survival children received parenteral nutrition support after operation, 5 of whom received parenteral nutrition support for more than 42 days, and they were followed up for 1-3 years after discharge. The short-time efficacy was satisfactory.
CONCLUSIONS:For children with type Ⅲ-b CIA, the distal apple-peel like intestine should be preserved as much as possible, the mesenteric reformation should be performed and the proximal dilated bowel should be partly resected and sutured. Postoperative nutritional support and early intestinal rehabilitation contribute to the compensation for rest intestines.