Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of General Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Division of Pediatric Radiology, Department of Radiology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
J Surg Res. 2019 Jan;233:167-172. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2018.08.002. Epub 2018 Aug 27.
When evaluating a pediatric patient with abdominal pain, identification of a small bowel-to-small bowel intussusception (SBI) on radiologic imaging can create a diagnostic dilemma. The clinical significance and need for surgical exploration of SBI is highly variable, as most of them are considered clinically insignificant. We hypothesize that combination of clinical and radiologic factors in an exclusively SBI population will yield factors that guide the clinician in making operative decisions.
A comprehensive database from a pediatric tertiary hospital was reviewed from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2016, for any radiographic study mentioning intussusception. Results were reviewed for patients having only SBI (i.e., not ileocolic intussusception), and this comprised the study cohort. The electronic medical records for these patients were reviewed for clinical presentation variables, need for operative intervention, and identification of the intussusception during surgery. Patients with SBI due to enteral feeding tubes were excluded from the study.
Within the study period, 139 patients were identified with an SBI on radiologic imaging. Univariate analysis yielded numerous clinical and radiologic factors highly predictive of the need for surgical intervention. However, upon multivariate analysis, only a history of prior abdominal surgery (odds ratio [OR]: 7.2; CI: 1.1-46.3), the presence of focal abdominal pain (OR: 22.1; CI: 4.2-116.3), and the intussusception length (cm; OR: 10.6; CI: 10.3-10.8) were correlated with the need for surgical intervention.
SBI is a disease process with a highly variable clinical significance. The presence of focal abdominal pain, a history of prior abdominal surgery, and the intussusception length are the greatest predictors of the need for operative intervention.
Level II.
在评估腹痛的儿科患者时,如果影像学检查发现小肠-小肠套叠(SBI),可能会导致诊断难题。大多数 SBI 被认为在临床上无重要意义,因此 SBI 的临床意义和是否需要手术探查存在很大差异。我们假设在单纯 SBI 人群中,结合临床和影像学因素,可以得出指导临床医生做出手术决策的因素。
对 2011 年 1 月 1 日至 2016 年 12 月 31 日期间,一家儿科三级医院的综合数据库进行了回顾,以查找任何提及肠套叠的放射学研究。对仅患有 SBI(即非回结型肠套叠)的患者的研究结果进行了回顾,并将其纳入研究队列。对这些患者的电子病历进行了回顾,以评估其临床表现变量、是否需要手术干预以及手术中是否发现肠套叠。患有因肠内喂养管引起的 SBI 的患者被排除在研究之外。
在研究期间,共发现 139 例影像学检查提示 SBI 的患者。单因素分析得出了许多对手术干预需求具有高度预测性的临床和影像学因素。然而,多因素分析显示,只有既往腹部手术史(比值比[OR]:7.2;95%可信区间[CI]:1.1-46.3)、局限性腹痛(OR:22.1;95%CI:4.2-116.3)和肠套叠长度(cm;OR:10.6;95%CI:10.3-10.8)与手术干预的需求相关。
SBI 是一种具有高度可变临床意义的疾病过程。局限性腹痛、既往腹部手术史和肠套叠长度是预测是否需要手术干预的最重要因素。
II 级。