%0 Journal Article %T An ileo-colic intussusception reaching down to the descending colon - A case report. %A Teixeira H %A Hauswirth F %A Römer N %A Muller MK %A Baechtold M %A Teixeira H %A Hauswirth F %A Römer N %A Muller MK %A Baechtold M %J Int J Surg Case Rep %V 93 %N 0 %D Apr 2022 2 %M 35381552 暂无%R 10.1016/j.ijscr.2022.107009 %X UNASSIGNED: Intussusception in healthy adults is rare and often associated with oncologic diseases. This case report presents a case of an ileo-colic intussusception reaching down to the descending colon in a healthy adult that required ileo-colic resection.
METHODS: We present a case of a 78-year-old male patient with acute onset unspecific abdominal pain. The medical history was unremarkable. Preoperative radiologic assessments showed an invagination of the small intestine into the colon without any signs of polyps or tumours. An emergency laparotomy with resection of the affected intestine was performed. The pathologist described a 49 cm length of intussuscepted colon and an additional 7 cm intussusception of the terminal ileum. A circular area with multiple polyps extending over 8 cm in the colon could be identified. The microscopic findings showed a low-grade dysplasia within this area. Following surgery, the patient was discharged to rehabilitation after a ten-day hospitalization.
UNASSIGNED: Intussusception in adults is rare and the clinical presentation includes unspecific symptoms making the diagnosis challenging. In 90% of the cases, a pathologic lesion is found (two-thirds are neoplasms). An intussusception involving the colon should be treated surgically without prior reduction due to the high incidence of a neoplasm and the risk for perforation and tumour dissemination.
CONCLUSIONS: In the literature, neoplastic disease represents the major cause for intussusception in adults. This report presents a rare case of an ileo-colic intussusception reaching down to the descending colon treated successfully with a subtotal colectomy.