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      Neonatal intestinal obstruction due to double jejunal web causing Windsock deformity

      case-report

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          Abstract

          Windsock deformity (WD) is a rare anomaly. A case of double jejunal web with WD causing neonatal intestinal obstruction is being reported.

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          Most cited references6

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          Intestinal atresia and stenosis: a 25-year experience with 277 cases.

          To evaluate the causes, clinical presentation, diagnosis, operative management, postoperative care, and outcome in infants with intestinal atresia. Retrospective case series. Pediatric tertiary care teaching hospital. A population-based sample of 277 neonates with intestinal atresia and stenosis treated from July 1, 1972, through April 30, 1997. The level of obstruction was duodenal in 138 infants, jejunoileal in 128, and colonic in 21. Of the 277 neonates, 10 had obstruction in more than 1 site. Duodenal atresia was associated with prematurity (46%), maternal polyhydramnios (33%), Down syndrome (24%), annular pancreas (33%), and malrotation (28%). Jejunoileal atresia was associated with intrauterine volvulus, (27%), gastroschisis (16%), and meconium ileus (11.7%). Patients with duodenal obstruction were treated by duodenoduodenostomy in 119 (86%), of 138 patients duodenotomy with web excision in 9 (7%), and duodenojejunostomy in 7 (5%) A duodenostomy tube was placed in 3 critically ill neonates. Patients with jejunoileal atresia were treated with resection in 97 (76%) of 128 patients (anastomosis, 45 [46%]; tapering enteroplasty, 23 [24%]; or temporary ostomy, 29 [30%]), ostomy alone in 25 (20%), web excision in 5 (4%), and the Bianchi procedure in 1 (0.8%). Patients with colon atresia were managed with initial ostomy and delayed anastomosis in 18 (86%) of 21 patients and resection with primary anastomosis in 3 (14%). Short-bowel syndrome was noted in 32 neonates. Morbidity and early and late mortality. Operative mortality for neonates with duodenal atresia was 4%, with jejunoileal atresia, 0.8%, and with colonic atresia, 0%. The long-term survival rate for children with duodenal atresia was 86%; with jejunoileal atresia, 84%; and with colon atresia, 100%. The Bianchi procedure (1 patient, 0.8%) and growth hormone, glutamine, and modified diet (4 patients, 1%) reduced total parenteral nutrition dependence. Cardiac anomalies (with duodenal atresia) and ultrashort-bowel syndrome (<40 cm) requiring long-term total parenteral nutrition, which can be complicated by liver disease (with jejunoileal atresia), are the major causes of morbidity and mortality in these patients. Use of growth factors to enhance adaptation and advances in small bowel transplantation may improve long-term outcomes.
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            Simultaneous laparotomy and intraoperative endoscopy for the treatment of high jejunal membranous stenosis in a 1-year-old boy.

            A 1-year-old boy with high jejunal membranous stenosis was successfully treated "a minima" by antimesenteric longitudinal enterotomy over the diaphragm, excision of the latter, and transverse closure of the bowel. This was made possible by use of simultaneous peroperative endoscopy, which allowed exact localization of the diaphragm. Peroperative endoscopy is a useful and accurate method for this purpose and should be considered in similar cases.
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              Case 1: A green case of failure to thrive.

              L Seltz (2008)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Indian Assoc Pediatr Surg
                JIAPS
                Journal of Indian Association of Pediatric Surgeons
                Medknow Publications (India )
                0971-9261
                1998-3891
                Jul-Sep 2010
                : 15
                : 3
                : 106-107
                Affiliations
                Department of Pediatric Surgery, SKIMS, Srinagar, J&K, India
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Dr. Aejaz Ahsan Baba, Department of Pediatric Surgery, SKIMS, Srinagar, J&K State, India. E-mail: dr_aejaz@ 123456yahoo.co.in
                Article
                JIAPS-15-106
                10.4103/0971-9261.71751
                2980921
                21124668
                7ee067d0-409a-4283-82d9-89505a172678
                © Journal of Indian Association of Pediatric Surgeons

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Categories
                Case Report

                Surgery
                windsock deformity,intestinal obstruction,jejunal web
                Surgery
                windsock deformity, intestinal obstruction, jejunal web

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