| Literature DB >> 31148901 |
Aneesh Dave1, James McMahon1, Assad Zahid1.
Abstract
Congenital peritoneal encapsulation (CPE) is a very rare, congenital condition characterised by the presence of an accessory peritoneal membrane which encases a variable extent of the small bowel. It is unclear how CPE develops, however it is currently understood to be a result of an aberrant adhesion in the peritoneal lining of the physiological hernia in foetal mid-gut development. The condition was first described in 1868, and subsequently there have been only 45 case reports of the phenomenon. No formal, systematised review of CPE has yet been performed, meaning the condition remains poorly understood, underdiagnosed and mismanaged. Diagnosis of CPE remains clinical with important adjuncts provided by imaging and diagnostic laparoscopy. Two thirds of patients present with abdominal pain, likely secondary to sub-acute bowel obstruction. A fixed, asymmetrical distension of the abdomen and differential consistency on abdominal palpation are more specific clinical features present in approximately 10% of cases. CPE is virtually undetectable on plain imaging, and is only detected on 40% of patients with computed tomography scan. Most patients will undergo diagnostic laparotomy to confirm the diagnosis. Management of CPE includes both medical management of the critically-unstable patient and surgical laparotomy, partial peritonectomy and adhesiolysis. Prognosis following prompt surgical treatment is excellent, with a majority of patients being symptom free at follow up. This review summarises the current literature on the aetiology, diagnosis and treatment of this rare disease. We also introduce a novel classification system for encapsulating bowel diseases, which may distinguish CPE from the commoner, more morbid conditions of abdominal cocoon and encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: Cocoon; Congenital; Encapsulation; Peritoneum; Sclerosis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31148901 PMCID: PMC6529893 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v25.i19.2294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Figure 1Literature search.
Patient demographics and key clinical characteristics
| McMahon et al[ | 2018 | Australia | 20 | M | Intermittent abdominal pain, distension | CT | Surgical resection of sac | Symptom free recovery | |
| Wolski et al[ | 2017 | Poland | 12 | M | Abdominal pain for 1 wk | XR, US | Surgical resection of sac | Post-operative complication of adhesion SBO | |
| Griffith et al[ | 2017 | United Kingdom | 12 | M | Abdominal pain and vomiting for 1 wk | XR, US | Surgical resection of sac | Gangrenous acalculous cholecystitis | |
| Arumugam et al[ | 2017 | India | 22 | F | Small bowel obstruction, assymetric distension | CT | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Zoulamoglou et al[ | 2016 | Greece | 28 | F | Intermittent abdominal pain for 1 yr, asymmetric distension | XR, CT | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Teixeira et al[ | 2015 | Portugal | 25 | M | Small bowel obstruction. Fixed, assymetrical distension | XR, CT | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Stewart et al[ | 2014 | Australia | 16 | M | Intermittent, chronic abdominal pain | XR, US | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Wani et al[ | 2013 | India | 28 | M | Generalised, intermittent abdominal pain | XR, CT, labs | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Naidoo et al[ | 2013 | India | 40 | M | Stab wound | XR, fluoro, CT | Surgical resection of sac | Stabbing injury | |
| Mitrousias et al[ | 2012 | Greece | 78 | F | 3 d of abdominal pain | XR, CT, labs | Surgical resection of sac | Helical pattern on CT | |
| Shamsuddin et al[ | 2012 | Pakistan | 16 | F | Small bowel obstruction | XR | Failed conservative. Surgical resection. | Excellent recovery | |
| Ince et al[ | 2012 | Turkey | 71 | M | Small bowel obstruction | XR, US, CT | Ileocaecal resection | ||
| Al-Taan et al[ | 2010 | United Kingdom | 82 | M | Asymptomatic | Surgical resection of tumour and sac | Bowel cancer | ||
| Kumara et al[ | 2009 | Sri Lanka | 44 | F | Cushing’s syndrome secondary to right adrenal tumour | CT | Surgical resection of tumour and sac | Adrenal tumour | |
| Sherigar et al[ | 2007 | United Kingdom | 85 | F | Small bowel obstruction | XR, CT | Surgical resection of sac | Patient died from chest sepsis | |
| Basu et al[ | 2006 | India | 21 | F | Distension, peritonism | XR, US, labs | Resection of sac, appendix, lavage | 7 yr follow up | |
| Chew et al[ | 2006 | Singapore | 38 | M | Small bowel obstruction | XR, CT | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Shioya et al[ | 2005 | Japan | 34 | M | Small bowel obstruction, right inguinal hernia | XR, labs | Surgical resection of sac | Excellent recovery | |
| Okobia et al[ | 2001 | Nigeria | 15 | F | Abdominal pain | ||||
| Mordehai et al[ | 2001 | Israel | 14 | F | Abdominal pain, vomiting, weight loss | XR, US | Surgical resection of sac | Post-operative ileus | |
| Naraynsingh et al[ | 2001 | West Indies | 64 | M | Abdominal pain, fixed asymmetrical distension, differential palpation | Surgical resection of sac | |||
| Lee et al[ | 2000 | South Korea | 22 | F | Abdominal pain, distension | XR, CT, labs | Failed conservative management. Surgical resection of sac | Excellent recovery | |
| Kyaw et al[ | 1998 | Singapore | 11 | M | Abdominal pain for 5 d, soft mass left flank | US, CT | Surgical resection of sac | Hydronephrosis | |
| Casas et al[ | 1998 | Spain | 43 | M | Intermittent abdominal pain for 6 mo | XR, fluoro, US, CT | Surgical resection of sac | Hydronephrosis. Asymptomatic at 14 mo | |
| Constantinides et al[ | 1998 | Italy | 49 | F | Found at autopsy. Intermittent, severe abdominal pain during life. | ||||
| Adedeji et al[ | 1994 | United Kingdom | 40 | M | Abdominal pain, peritonism for 1 d | XR, labs | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Tsunoda et al[ | 1993 | Japan | 52 | M | Small bowel obstruction, central abdominal mass | XR, US, CT | Surgical resection of sac | Asymptomatic at 8 mo | |
| Silva et al[ | 1992 | Japan | 29 | M | Intermittent abdominal pain, scaphoid abdomen | XR, fluoro, CT, labs | Surgical resection of sac | Patient died due to gangrenous small bowel | |
| Awasthi et al[ | 1991 | India | 16 | F | Abdominal pain for 9 mo, distension | XR, fluoro | Surgical resection of sac | Discharged day 6 with resolution of symptoms. | |
| Arora et al[ | 1989 | India | F | Abdominal pain | Colorectal cancer | ||||
| Askew et al[ | 1988 | United Kingdom | M | Incidental finding during surgery | |||||
| Walsh et al[ | 1988 | Ireland | 82 | M | Small bowel obstruction | XR | |||
| Huddy et al[ | 1988 | United Kingdom | 56 | M | Intermittent abdominal pain | XR | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Lifschitz et al[ | 1987 | Ciskei | 66 | M | Abdominal pain, vomiting, distension for 3 wk | XR, labs | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Jamieson et al[ | 1985 | United Kingdom | Incidental finding during laparotomy | Surgical resection of sac | Colorectal cancer | ||||
| Sieck et al[ | 1983 | Saudi Arabia | 14 | F | Nausea, vomiting, distension for 3 mo | XR, fluoro, labs | Surgical resection of sac | Patient had breast cancer | |
| Sieck et al[ | 1983 | Saudi Arabia | 65 | F | Intermittent pelvic pain, fever, abdominal distension for 5 yr | Surgical resection of sac | |||
| Sayfan et al[ | 1979 | Israel | 12 | F | Abdominal pain, vomiting for 1 d | XR, labs | Surgical resection of sac | Excellent recovery. Discharged day 7 | |
| Lewin et al[ | 1970 | United States | 66 | M | Post-mortem examination. Patient died of acute myocardial infarct. | ||||
| Thorlaksen et al[ | 1953 | Canada | 57 | M | Diarrhoea, abdominal pain for several years | XR, labs | Initial conservative management successful. | ||
| Thorlaksen et al[ | 1953 | Canada | 53 | M | Incidental finding in asymptomatic patient | XR, labs | Surgical resection of sac | Car accident, intra-abdominal haemmorhage | |
| Thorlaksen et al[ | 1953 | Canada | 64 | M | Epigastric pain, constipation for 2 yr | XR, labs | Surgical resection of sac | ||
| Papez et al[ | 1932 | United States | 61 | M | Cadaveric dissection | ||||
| Lickley et al[ | 1907 | United Kingdom | 52 | M | Autopsy. Asymptomatic during life | ||||
| Cleland et al[ | 1868 | Ireland | Cadaveric dissection |
XR: X-Ray; CT: Computed tomography; US: Ultrasound scan; Fluoro: Fluoroscopic imaging; Labs: Laboratory investigations.
Geographical distribution of cases
| United Kingdom | 8 |
| India | 6 |
| Canada | 3 |
| Japan | 3 |
| Australia | 2 |
| Greece | 2 |
| Ireland | 2 |
| Israel | 2 |
| Saudi Arabia | 2 |
| Singapore | 2 |
| United States | 2 |
| Ciskei | 1 |
| Italy | 1 |
| South Korea | 1 |
| Nigeria | 1 |
| Pakistan | 1 |
| Poland | 1 |
| Portugal | 1 |
| Spain | 1 |
| Sri Lanka | 1 |
| Turkey | 1 |
| West Indies | 1 |
Figure 2Classification system for encapsulating bowel diseases. SLE: Systemic lupus erythematosus.
Key differences between congenital peritoneal encapsulation and fibrotic peritoneal encapsulation
| Cause | Congenital | Acquired |
| Trigger | Primary/Idiopathic (abdominal cocoon) or secondary (encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis) | |
| Incidence | 45 cases | Idiopathic: 184 cases Secondary: Based on cause |
| Age (yr, range) | 40.8 (11-85) | 34.7 (7-87) |
| Sex (M:F) | 5:3 | 2:1 |
| Geographical Geography | Europe, Sub-continental Asia | Equatorial regions |
| Morphology | Identical to peritoneum. Thin, semi-transparent, vascularised, soft. | Similar to scar tissue. Thick, white, firm, fibrotic. |
| Histopathology | Identical to peritoneum. Mesothelial lining, fibro-connective tissue. | Dense fibro-connective tissue proliferation, chronic inflammatory cell infiltration and dilated lymphatics |
| Treatment | Peritonectomy, adhesiolysis | Corticosteroids, tamoxifen, peritonectomy |
| Prognosis | Excellent. Near complete resolution of symptoms. | Up to 50% mortality at 1 yr following diagnosis. |
Figure 3Diagnostic algorithm for congenital peritoneal encapsulation. XR: X-ray; CT: Computed tomography; US: Ultrasound scan; CPE: Congenital peritoneal encapsulation.
Figure 4Computed tomography scan (coronal view) of patient with congenital peritoneal encapsulation.
Figure 5Accessory peritoneal membrane, with attachment to posterior body wall (arrow).