Volume 56, Issue 1, August 2021, Pages 28–32
Marouane Baiss1, Anwar Rahali2, Jalil Mdaghri3, Khalid Lahlou4, Rahal Mssrouri5, Said Benamr6, and Abdellatif Settaf7
1 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
2 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
3 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
4 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
5 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
6 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
7 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
Original language: English
Copyright © 2021 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Intussusception is the penetration of a segment of bowel into a more distal segment. It is frequent in children and considered an unusual condition in adults. We report a case of a 65-year old woman with acute intussusception secondary to ileal polyp diagnosed by abdominal CT scan and confirmed by surgery. The patient underwent a bloc ileocecal resection with respecting the oncological rules.
Author Keywords: Intussusception, high grade dysplasia, polyp, CT scan, surgery, histological analysis.
Marouane Baiss1, Anwar Rahali2, Jalil Mdaghri3, Khalid Lahlou4, Rahal Mssrouri5, Said Benamr6, and Abdellatif Settaf7
1 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
2 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
3 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
4 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
5 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
6 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
7 Department of hepatobilary, digestive and endocrine surgery, Department of surgery B, University Hospital Centre Ibn Sina, Rabat, Morocco
Original language: English
Copyright © 2021 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Intussusception is the penetration of a segment of bowel into a more distal segment. It is frequent in children and considered an unusual condition in adults. We report a case of a 65-year old woman with acute intussusception secondary to ileal polyp diagnosed by abdominal CT scan and confirmed by surgery. The patient underwent a bloc ileocecal resection with respecting the oncological rules.
Author Keywords: Intussusception, high grade dysplasia, polyp, CT scan, surgery, histological analysis.
How to Cite this Article
Marouane Baiss, Anwar Rahali, Jalil Mdaghri, Khalid Lahlou, Rahal Mssrouri, Said Benamr, and Abdellatif Settaf, “Management of recurrent ileocolic intussusception in adults caused by a high-grade dysplastic polyp,” International Journal of Innovation and Scientific Research, vol. 56, no. 1, pp. 28–32, August 2021.