| Literature DB >> 29751786 |
Yi Wang1, Yeming Wu1, Wenbin Guan2, Wenbo Yan1, Yuhua Li3, Jin Fang3, Jun Wang4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Meconium peritonitis is an infrequent congenital disease usually caused by perforation of the fetal digestive tract. Meconium peritonitis resulting from intrauterine appendiceal perforation has been rarely reported and is often overlooked during pregnancy. We herein report two cases of fetal appendiceal perforation. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Appendicitis; Fetus; Intestinal duplication; Meconium peritonitis; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29751786 PMCID: PMC5948796 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-018-1133-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Fig. 1Imaging examination in fetal period and intraoperative finding for Case 1. a Prenatal US examination in 26-week gestation revealed the fetal intestine was dilated obviously as the inner diameter to 12.7 mm. b Sagittal MRI scanning in 34-week gestation showed the ascites had been increasing constantly with 32 mm in depth. c, d Gangrenous appendicitis with perforation was near the tip as well as a perforated lesion at the terminal ileum. We performed a limited ileocaecal resection with ileo-ascending colon anastomosis (white arrow: the gangrenous appendix, pink arrow: terminal ileum, yellow arrow: ascending colon)
Fig. 2Histopathologic examination revealed appendiceal perforation and caecal duplication for Case 1. a HE staining showed the absence of the appendiceal wall, incomplete swelling mucosa and fibrino-suppurative infiltrate in the lumen. (HE, × 40). b The microscopic section showed neutrephil and eosinophilia infiltration in the mucosa of the gangrenous appendix. (HE, × 400). c, d The microscopic section showed the whole structure of caecal duplication in the lumen of the caecum (HE, original size), and there was complete mucosa, muscularis and serosa layer as same to the normal caecum. (HE, × 40)
Fig. 3Imaging examination, intraoperative and Histopathological finding for Case 2. a Prenatal US showed the ascites in the abdominal cavity with 14.3 mm in depth. b After birth, the abdominal plain suggested a calcification foci in the right lower abdominal cavity (Red Arrow). c, d Intraoperative finding showed gangrenous appendicitis near the tip adhere to the calcification lesion and histopathological results revealed that perforated appendix with incomplete mucosa, tissue hyperemia and infiltration of inflammatory cells. (HE, × 40)
Reported cases of fetal appendiceal perforation
| First Author/ Reference | Age/Gender | Symptoms/Signs | Treatment | Pathological found | Combined Disease | Follow-up/period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L.W. Martin [ | 21 days/F | Vomiting, fever, Abdominal distention/ Mass, RLQ | Appendectomy | AP with a local calcified pseudocyst | – | Uneventful/1 year |
| K.L. Narasimharao [ | 12 days/F | Constipation, Abdominal distention/Mass, RLQ | Ileocaecal resection | AP with local calcification | – | Unkown |
| R.R. Lebel [ | 23 weeks+ 3 days (gestation)/F | Spontaneous fetal demise / Hydrops fetalis | – | AP with local hydrops | Parvovirus B-19 infected | – |
| Valentina Pastore [ | 3 days/F | Tachycardia, fever, vomiting, abdominal distension | Ladd’s procedure with AP | gangrenous AP | Patau’s syndrome | Died 2 months after surgery ( |
Abbreviations in the table: Age/Gender: F Female, M Male, Symptoms/Signs: RLQ right lower quadrant of the abdomen, AP appendiceal perforation