Journal of Medical Case Reports (Dec 2018)

Surgical outcome of jejunum-jejunum intussusception secondary to Rapunzel syndrome: a case report

  • Martín Adrián Bolívar-Rodríguez,
  • Rodolfo Fierro-López,
  • Adrián Pamanes-Lozano,
  • Marcel Antonio Cazarez-Aguilar,
  • Benny Alonso Osuna-Wong,
  • José Cándido Ortiz-Bojórquez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-018-1883-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract Background Adult intestinal intussusception is a rare condition caused by the mechanical disruption of bowel motility. A bezoar is defined as indigestible material inside the gastrointestinal tract that develops into a trapped mass; the most frequent bezoar is a trichobezoar. When a trichobezoar extends into the small intestine it is defined as Rapunzel’s syndrome. Literature describing complications related to this pathology remains scarce. Case presentation A 16-year-old Mexican girl presented to our emergency room with acute abdomen and a presumptive diagnosis of intestinal obstruction. Computed tomography was suggestive of intussusception. Surgery confirmed a jejunal-jejunal intussusception with a mass within the gastric cavity extending into her small intestine, corresponding to a trichobezoar. A manual intussusception reduction and a gastrotomy with extraction of the trichobezoar were performed. Conclusions We present a case of a jejunum intussusception as a complication of Rapunzel syndrome. Our patient had a favorable outcome after surgical intervention with a manual intussusception reduction, with retrograde displacement of the trichobezoar into the gastric lumen, and a complete extraction through a gastrostomy. Follow-up included psychiatric evaluation.

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