Clinical Practice Guideline Intestinal invagination in children

Authors

  • Elizabeth Hernandez Moore Hospital Pediátrico Provincial "Eduardo Agramonte Piña", Camaguey, Cuba
  • Mauro Castelló González
  • Dayamnelis Aguilar Atanay
  • Yonet Piovet Dorta
  • Enrique Loret de Mola Pino
  • Mario Giraudy Zuñiga

Keywords:

intestinal invagination, ultrasound, hydrostatic reduction.

Abstract

Intestinal invagination is the most common cause of intestinal occlusion in infants and children under two years of age. Due to its frequency, the diversity of clinical forms and the available treatment variants, this Guideline is made with the aim of achieving early diagnosis in the greatest number of cases and systematizing the updated treatment of this entity in pediatric surgery services. The classic presentation form of it is: colics, vomiting, gooseberry jelly kind of stools and lethargy, only present in 30% of patients. Diagnosis is currently confirmed by ultrasound. Invagination can be treated in two ways: by hydrostatic or pneumatic reduction methods with imaging follow-up, indicated in children with non-complicated invaginations, and surgical treatment. The Clinical Practice Guideline for Intestinal Invagination approved by consensus was presented at the III National Symposium of Pediatric Surgery in Varadero/2019.


 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2021-04-02

How to Cite

1.
Hernandez Moore E, Castelló González M, Aguilar Atanay D, Piovet Dorta Y, Loret de Mola Pino E, Giraudy Zuñiga M. Clinical Practice Guideline Intestinal invagination in children. Rev Cubana Pediatría [Internet]. 2021 Apr. 2 [cited 2025 Jun. 22];93(2). Available from: https://revpediatria.sld.cu/index.php/ped/article/view/1185

Issue

Section

Colaboración especial