BACKGROUND Although intestinal obstruction is one of the most common surgical emergencies in an infant,it is difficult to diagnose neonatal enteric duplication cysts(EDC)preoperatively owing to their rarity as a cause...BACKGROUND Although intestinal obstruction is one of the most common surgical emergencies in an infant,it is difficult to diagnose neonatal enteric duplication cysts(EDC)preoperatively owing to their rarity as a cause of intestinal obstruction.We describe a case report of a neonatal EDC presenting intestinal obstruction and shock.CASE SUMMARY A 32-d-old male infant with a prenatal sonographic finding of bladder distension was admitted to our hospital for a severely distended abdomen,fever,and oliguria.The first diagnostic hypothesis was septic shock and intestinal obstruction.The patient’s symptoms worsened;following an emergency surgical exploratory laparotomy and histopathological findings,the final diagnosis of cecal duplication cyst was confirmed.The patient’s postoperative course was uneventful,and on the fifth postoperative day,oral feeding restarted.Twenty days later,the patient was discharged from the hospital.CONCLUSION Although EDC located in the cecum is exceptional,it should be considered when evaluating suspected intestinal obstruction and shock.展开更多
基金Supported by the Soonchunhyang University Research Fund.
文摘BACKGROUND Although intestinal obstruction is one of the most common surgical emergencies in an infant,it is difficult to diagnose neonatal enteric duplication cysts(EDC)preoperatively owing to their rarity as a cause of intestinal obstruction.We describe a case report of a neonatal EDC presenting intestinal obstruction and shock.CASE SUMMARY A 32-d-old male infant with a prenatal sonographic finding of bladder distension was admitted to our hospital for a severely distended abdomen,fever,and oliguria.The first diagnostic hypothesis was septic shock and intestinal obstruction.The patient’s symptoms worsened;following an emergency surgical exploratory laparotomy and histopathological findings,the final diagnosis of cecal duplication cyst was confirmed.The patient’s postoperative course was uneventful,and on the fifth postoperative day,oral feeding restarted.Twenty days later,the patient was discharged from the hospital.CONCLUSION Although EDC located in the cecum is exceptional,it should be considered when evaluating suspected intestinal obstruction and shock.