𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Intussusception secondary to a carcinoid tumor in an adult patient

✍ Scribed by Wiener-Carrillo, Isidoro; González-Alvarado, Carlos; Cervantes-Valladolid, Mario; Echaverry-Navarrete, Denis; Zubieta-O’Farrill, Gregorio; Gudiño-Chávez, Andrés


Book ID
122156520
Publisher
Elsevier
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Weight
910 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
2210-2612

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


INTRODUCTION

Intussusception in adult patients represents 5% of all intussusceptions and 1–5% of bowel obstructions in adults. In contrast to pediatric patients, 90% of the time, in adults, it's caused by well-established pathologic mechanisms, such as carcinoma, polyps, diverticula, Meckel diverticula, stenosis, or benign neoplasms. Small intestine intussusceptions are more frequent, but colonic intussusceptions are caused 50% of the time by malignant neoplasms, especially adenocarcinoma.

PRESENTATION OF CASE

We present a 70-year-old woman, with no relevant familial history, who presented with a 3-day symptomatology consisting of epigastric, colic, diffuse, abdominal pain of moderate intensity, which progressed till reaching a severe intensity, also referring abdominal distension, nausea, and gastrointestinal-content vomits.

DISCUSSION

In adult patients, the exact mechanism of intussusception is unknown in 8–20% of the cases, however, secondary intussusception can occur with any lesion of the intestinal wall or any irritant factor in its lumen that alters normal peristaltic activity and that could serve as a trigger to start an intussusception of one bowel segment over another the most common site is the small intestine.

CONCLUSION

Intussusception represents an unusual problem in adult patients; it requires a high clinical suspicion, mainly as a differential diagnosis in patients with intestinal obstruction, and it clinically presents as a subacute or chronic illness. CT represents the most useful diagnostic tool. An attempt to perform reduction procedures in small intestine intussusceptions can be done, however, in ileocolic or colonic intussusceptions, a formal resection of the segment is recommended.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES