Case Reports in Gastroenterology (May 2012)

Management of Sigmoid Volvulus Avoiding Sigmoid Resection

  • Nikolaos Katsikogiannis,
  • Nikolaos Machairiotis,
  • Paul Zarogoulidis,
  • Eirini Sarika,
  • Aikaterini Stylianaki,
  • Maria Zisoglou,
  • Vasilis Zervas,
  • Metaxia Bareka,
  • Christos Christofis,
  • Alkis Iordanidis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000339216
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 293 – 299

Abstract

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Acute sigmoid volvulus is typically caused by an excessively mobile and redundant segment of colon with a stretched mesenteric pedicle. When this segment twists on its pedicle, the result can be obstruction, ischemia and perforation. A healthy, 18-year-old Caucasian woman presented to the emergency department complaining of cramping abdominal pain, distention, constipation and obstipation for the last 72 h, accompanied by nausea, vomiting and abdominal tenderness. The patient had tympanitic percussion tones and no bowel sounds. She was diagnosed with acute sigmoid volvulus. Although urgent resective surgery seems to be the appropriate treatment for those who present with acute abdominal pain, intestinal perforation or ischemic necrosis of the intestinal mucosa, the first therapeutic choice for clinically stable patients in good general condition is considered, by many institutions, to be endoscopic decompression. Controversy exists on the decision of the time, the type of definitive treatment, the strategy and the most appropriate surgical technique, especially for teenagers for whom sigmoid resection can be avoided.

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