Rectal intussusception in symptomatic patients is different from that in asymptomatic volunteers
Autor: | S. M. Scott, J. Epstein, Norman S. Williams, Peter J. Lunniss, Lee S. Dvorkin, Marc A. Gladman |
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Rok vydání: | 2005 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Rectum Asymptomatic Intussusception (medical disorder) medicine Humans Rectal intussusception In patient Defecation Volunteer Aged Defecography business.industry Invagination Middle Aged medicine.disease Surgery Rectal Diseases medicine.anatomical_structure Female Full thickness medicine.symptom business Constipation Intussusception |
Zdroj: | British Journal of Surgery. 92:866-872 |
ISSN: | 1365-2168 0007-1323 |
DOI: | 10.1002/bjs.4912 |
Popis: | Background Rectal intussusception is a common finding at evacuation proctography in both symptomatic and asymptomatic individuals. Little information exists, however, as to whether intussusception morphology differs between patients with evacuatory dysfunction and healthy volunteers. Methods Thirty patients (19 women; median age 44 (range 21–76) years) with disordered rectal evacuation, in whom an isolated intussusception was seen on proctography, were studied. Various morphological parameters were measured, and compared with those from 11 asymptomatic controls (six women; median age 30 (range 24–38) years) found, from 31 volunteers, to have rectal intussusception. Intussusceptum thickness greater than 3 mm was designated as full thickness. Intussuscepta impeding evacuation were deemed to be occluding. Results Twenty-two patients had full-thickness intussusception, compared with two controls (P = 0·003). Intussusceptum thickness was significantly greater in the symptomatic group (anterior component: P = 0·004; posterior: P = 0·011). Twenty patients in the symptomatic group, but only three subjects in the control group, had a mechanically occluding intussusception (P = 0·043), although only three patients demonstrated evacuatory dynamics outside the normal range. Conclusion Rectal intussusception in patients with evacuatory dysfunction is more advanced morphologically than that seen in asymptomatic controls; it is predominantly full thickness in patients and mucosal in controls. However, caution is required when selecting patients for intervention based solely on radiological findings. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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