Journal of Education and Teaching in Emergency Medicine (Apr 2018)

Intussusception

  • Julian Jakubowski, DO

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21980/J8SH0W
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
pp. 14 – 15

Abstract

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History of present illness: A 2-year-old boy presented to the Emergency Department with a 2-day history of episodic abdominal pain associated with non-bloody, non-bilious vomiting. His mother reported he would appear fine one moment and then start crying, complaining of pain, and pulling his knees up to his chest. The patient most recently had an episode lasting 10-minutes prior to arrival. Patient without complaint at triage. Examination was initially normal as he was asymptomatic, however, he started to cry and pulled his knees to his chest when the physician was about to leave the room. At that point, he had localized tenderness on the right side of the abdomen and a point-of-care ultrasound was performed. The high frequency linear probe was placed in the area of tenderness. Significant findings: A segment of bowel within the right abdomen that measured approximately 1.6 x 1.5 cm transaxially. It demonstrated a hypoechoic edematous outer loop of bowel (blue arrow) and hyperechoic compressed loop of bowel telescoping within (red star), this is known as the “target sign.” Discussion: Intussusception is the invagination or telescoping of part of the intestine into itself. It is the most common cause of intestinal obstruction in children younger than 2 years.1 Ninety-five percent are ileocolic but any part of the small or large intestine can be involved.2 Abdominal pain is the most common symptom.3 Patients classically experience cyclic episodes (10 – 15 minutes) of severe abdominal pain. During these painful episodes, patients are often described as drawing the legs up to the abdomen and screaming in inconsolable pain. Ultrasound is operator dependent, however the sensitivity and specificity for intussusception approaches 100% with an experienced ultrasonographer.4 A good history and physical exam remain important, as the appearance of a “target sign” in the right lower abdomen can also be seen in appendicitis, caused by an appendixwith an appendicolith. Topics: Point of Care Ultrasound, POCUS, abdominal pain, ultrasound intussusception

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