| Literature DB >> 24147247 |
Esohe Ohuoba1, Gary Fruhman, Oluyinka Olutoye, Nikolaos Zacharias.
Abstract
Fetal intestinal volvulus is a rare life-threatening condition. Late diagnosis of volvulus contributes to high rate of morbidity and mortality. It has variable degrees of presentation and survival. Intrauterine volvulus may be complicated by intestinal atresia due to ischemic necrosis. To our knowledge, there are three reported cases of term fetal demise. We report a case of fetal intestinal volvulus with perinatal survival of the largest term infant described with this complication to date. The volvulus was associated with type 3A jejunal atresia and intestinal pathology was noted on prenatal ultrasound. The infant was born via urgent cesarean delivery at 37(6/7) weeks of gestation and underwent emergent exploratory laparotomy with resection of small bowel and primary end-to-end anastomosis. Intrauterine intestinal volvulus may be suspected on prenatal ultrasound but only definitively diagnosed postnatally. Signs of fetal distress and volvulus are rarely associated with reports of survival in the term fetus. We review reported cases of prenatally suspected volvulus in infants documented to survive past the neonatal period. As fetal volvulus and most intestinal atresias/stenoses manifest during the third trimester, we recommend that the limited fetal anatomical survey during growth ultrasounds at 32 to 36 weeks routinely include an assessment of the fetal bowel.Entities:
Keywords: fetal intestinal volvulus; intrauterine volvulus; intussusception; perinatal mortality
Year: 2013 PMID: 24147247 PMCID: PMC3799706 DOI: 10.1055/s-0033-1349367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AJP Rep ISSN: 2157-7005
Fig. 1Normal bowel at 24 weeks of gestation sonogram.
Fig. 2Normal abdominal circumference at 36 weeks of gestation sonogram.
Fig. 3“Coffee bean” sign at 36 weeks of gestation sonogram.
Fig. 4Volvulus at 36 weeks of gestation showing striking tubular dilatation, suggested the development of fetal intestinal pathology.
Perinatal and neonatal findings of fetal volvulus that survived past the neonatal period
| Case no. | Study | Age (wk) | Delivery | Sex | Weight (g) | Fetal ultrasound findings | Procedure | Alive at age |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Molvarec et al | 32 | Cesarean | F | 2,150 | Dilated small bowels, mild polyhydramnios | Jejunoileostomy | 28 mo |
| 2 | Molvarec et al | 36 | Cesarean | M | 2,350 | Dilated small bowels | Ileoileostomy | 16 mo |
| 3 | Durand et al | 34 | Cesarean | F | 2,180 | Dilated loops of bowel | Unknown | 10 y |
| Durand et al | 39 | Cesarean | F | 2,660 | Dilated loops of bowel | Unknown | 15 mo | |
| 5 | Durand et al | 34 | Cesarean | F | 2,190 | Dilated loops of bowel | Unknown | 5 mo |
| 6 | Leung et al | 34 | Vaginal | F | 3,000 | Ascites meconium peritonitis | Unknown | 1 mo |
| Crisera et al | 37 | Vaginal | U | N/A | No polyhydramnios | Jejunostomy | 9 wk | |
| 8 | Usmani and Kenigsberg | 29-30 | Vaginal | F | 1,200 | Polyhydramnios | Bowel resection | 7 y |
| 9 | Samuel et al | 34 | Cesarean | U | N/A | Unknown | Ileostomy, colostomy | 2 mo |
| 10 | Black et al | 36 | Cesarean | M | 2,860 | Unknown | Anastomosis | 2 y |
| 11 | Black et al | 34 | Undocumented | M | 2,170 | Dilated loops, aperistaltic | Anastomosis | 18 mo |
| 12 | Has and Gunay | 34 | Vaginal | M | 2,000 | Polyhydramnios, ascites, dilated loops of bowel | Bowel resection | 36 d |
| 13 | Park et al | 33 | Vaginal | M | 2,790 | Dilated loops of bowel, coffee bean sign | Anastomosis | 4 mo |
| 14 | Noreldeen et al | 31 | Cesarean | M | 1,860 | Dilated loops of bowel ascites | Anastomosis | 1 y |
| 15 | Yu et al | 37 | Undocumented | F | 2,900 | Polyhydramnios, whirlpool sign, dilated loops of bowel | End-to-end anastomosis | 28 mo |
| 16 | Current case | 37 | Cesarean | M | 3,353 | Dilated loops of bowel | Bowel resection anastomosis | 24 mo |
Abbreviations: F, female; M, male; N/A, not available; U, unknown.