Malrotation/Volvulus Flashcards

1
Q

What is malrotation?

A

= abnormal alignment of midgut after small bowel returns to abdominal cavity from the physiological hernia in the cord at 10 weeks of gestation

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2
Q

When is malrotation most common?

A

1st yr

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3
Q

What is the normal development of the gut (which is relevant for malrotation)?

A
  • 6-10 weeks gestation: physiological hernia of cord, elongates and develops
  • Gut rotates 270 degrees counterclockwise around SMA axis - caecum in RLQ and the duodenojejunal flexure in the LUQ
  • Bowel returns 10 weeks
  • mesentery becomes permanently adherent (by ‘zygosis’) to the posterior abdominal parietal peritoneum
  • Normal mesentery has a broad, oblique attachment between ileocaecal junction and duodeno- jejunal junction, preventing volvulus
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4
Q

What is the pathophysiology of malrotation?

A
  • In malrotation, small bowel remains mostly on the right side of the abdomen and the caecum ends up in the mid-upper abdomen, fixed to the right lateral wall by peritoneal bands which cross the duodenum and can compress it.
    • Everything stays on the right - base lessens, with same bowel
  • Failure of zygosis, along with abnormal placement of gut predisposes to volvulus as the small bowel has a narrow-based mesentery that is very mobile.
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5
Q

When will malrotation cause ischaemic bowel, and when will it not?

A
  • A 360° twist will result in venous and lymphatic engorgement and bile-stained vomiting
  • A 720° twist will result in arterial ischaemia
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6
Q

Why do babies with malrotation not present at birth?

A
  • Before birth amniotic fluid is swallowed, but peristalsis is not very active
  • After birth breast milk stimulates vastly enhanced peristalsis, which probably triggers the twist, with vigorous movement of small bowel which is not fixed by the narrow base of the mesentery
  • Malrotation commonly presents a few days after birth when volvulus occurs.
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7
Q

What is the classic feature of malrotation?

A

• Sudden, bile stained, grassy green vomiting

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8
Q

What are some late signs of malrotation?

A
  • PR bleeding - gut is starting to die
  • Abdominal distension
  • Abdominal tenderness - crampy
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9
Q

What is the best investigation of malrotation? What will you see?

A
  • Contrast study
    • abnormal positioning of duodenum and DJ flexure
    • Look for corkscrew
    • Gastric and proximal duodenal dilatation
    • Paucity of gas in small intestine
    • Rarely a “double bubble”
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10
Q

What determines whether medical or surgical Mx in undertaken?

A
  • If C-shaped duodenal loop is seen, conservative Mx

* If S-shaped duodenum seen, surgical Mx

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11
Q

What is the surgical management of malrotation? What does the surgery involve?

A

Ladd’s procedure:
• Untwist the bowel
• Put all small bowel on right hand side and all large bowel on left hand side
• May lead to appendicitis presenting under the spleen
○ Therefore also take out appendix
• Wait for 10 minutes to see if reperfusion occurs (assess amount of bowel infarction)
• No need for bowel fixing as adhesions usually fix the bowel in place anyway
• Increased incidence of bowel obstruction in the future
• Widen mesentery too

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