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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Intussusception in adults

Agha Fp
- 01 Mar 1986 - 
- Vol. 146, Iss: 3, pp 527-531
TLDR
When an intussusception is encountered in adults, an underlying pathologic process usually can and should be determined for proper management.
Abstract
A review of 25 adult patients with intussusception is reported. Intussusception in adults constituted 16.6% of 150 intussusception cases observed during 1956-1985. The underlying pathologic processes were identified in 23 patients (92%). Etiologically, adult intussusception could be categorized into four groups: (1) tumor-related (13 cases, 52%); (2) postoperative (nine cases, 36%); (3) miscellaneous--Meckel diverticulum (one case, 4%); and (4) idiopathic (two cases, 8%). The tumor-related intussusceptions were caused by benign tumors in five and malignant tumors in eight patients. Postoperative intussusceptions were related to various factors including suture lines, ostomy closure sites, adhesions, long intestinal tubes, bypassed intestinal segments, submucosal edema, abnormal bowel motility, electrolyte imbalance, and chronic dilatation of the bowel. The sites of involvement of intussusception were jejunogastric (one), jejunojejunal (seven), ileoileal (four), ileocolic (10), and colocolic (three patients). Four patients had synchronous multiple (ileoileal and jejunojejunal), four had compound (ileoilealcolic), and two had recurrent intussusceptions. When an intussusception is encountered in adults, an underlying pathologic process usually can and should be determined for proper management.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Intussusception of the bowel in adults: a review.

TL;DR: Primary intussusception is caused by organic lesions, such as inflammatory bowel disease, postoperative adhesions, Meckel's diverticulum, benign and malignant lesions, metastatic neoplasms or even iatrogenically, due to the presence of intestinal tubes, jejunostomy feeding tubes or after gastric surgery.
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Intussusception in adults: institutional review.

TL;DR: In this article, a retrospective review performed at The Mount Sinai Medical Center identified 27 patients, 16 years and older, with a diagnosis of intestinal intussusception, including 13 males and 14 females.
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Adult intestinal intussusception: CT appearances and identification of a causative lead point.

TL;DR: Although there is considerable overlap of CT findings, when a lead mass is seen at CT as a separate and distinct entity vis-à-vis edematous bowel, it can be considered a reliable indicator of a lead point intussusception.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pictorial review: adult intussusception--a CT diagnosis.

TL;DR: In this paper, the CT findings are characteristic of intussusception both in the small bowel and colon and awareness of these findings allows the radiologist to make the correct diagnosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adult intussusception detected at CT or MR imaging: Clinical-imaging correlation

TL;DR: Less than one-third of adult intussusceptions demonstrated at CT or MR imaging were caused by a neoplastic lead point, and almost half of adult cases in this series were idiopathic.
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