Air reduction of intussusception after abdominal blunt trauma and a literature review

Article information

Clin Exp Emerg Med. 2016;3(1):59-62
Publication date (electronic) : 2016 March 31
doi : https://doi.org/10.15441/ceem.15.014
Department of Emergency Medicine, Hallym University Medical Center, Hallym University Sacred Heart Hospital, Anyang, Korea
Correspondence to: You Dong Sohn  Department of Emergency Medicine, Hallym University Medical Center, 22 Gwanpyeong-ro 170beon-gil, Dongan-gu, Anyang 14068, Korea  E-mail: medysohn@hallym.or.kr
Received 2015 October 6; Revised 2015 October 26; Accepted 2015 November 1.

Abstract

The typical presentation of intussusception includes intermittent severe abdominal pain, vomiting, rectal bleeding, and the presence of an abdominal mass. We present a case of intussusception after abdominal blunt trauma along with a literature review. A 4-year-old girl was admitted to the emergency department after a bicycle accident. She complained of progressively worsening abdominal pain, but there was no vomiting, fever, bloody stool, or abdominal mass. She was finally diagnosed with traumatic intussusception by ultrasonography and treated with air reduction. Because the typical symptoms are unusual in traumatic intussusception, close attention must be paid to avoid a delayed diagnosis.

INTRODUCTION

Intussusception is a common cause of intestinal obstruction in children between the ages of 6 and 36 months. Although idiopathic intussusception is most common in children, recent studies show adenovirus as a possible risk factor [1]. Further, conditions such as Meckel’s diverticulum, polyps, or small bowel lymphoma are other known etiologies. However, traumatic intussusception is quite rare. A recent review of the English literature revealed 23 cases of intussusception caused by abdominal trauma, with only 8 cases in preadolescents [2,3]. Because the typical presentation of sudden onset of intermittent and severe cramping, vomiting, rectal bleeding, and a sausage-shaped abdominal mass are unusual in traumatic intussusceptions, we need to pay greater attention to avoid a delayed diagnosis. If the intussusception is not treated promptly, the vascular perfusion of the bowel may be compromised, resulting in bowel ischemia and possibly perforation. In the present report, we introduce the case of a 4-year-old girl who presented with intussusception after abdominal blunt trauma; in addition, we present a review of the literature.

CASE REPORT

A 4-year-old girl without underlying disease was admitted to the emergency department one day after blunt right upper abdominal trauma caused by a bicycle accident. The abdominal pain was initially mild and tolerable, but progressively worsened. She complained of right upper abdominal pain but had no vomiting or diarrhea. On initial examination, there was mild abdominal distension and right upper quadrant tenderness with a scratch wound. Except for these findings, the physical examination was normal without fluid collection on focused assessment with ultrasonography for trauma (FAST). The patient’s white blood cell count was mildly elevated at 8,900/µL, hemoglobin level was 12.9 g/dL, platelet count was 211,000/µL, erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 11 mm/hr, and C-reactive protein level was 3.44 mg/dL. On abdominal radiography, a mass-like lesion was observed in the right upper quadrant (Fig. 1). We could not suspect that the abnormal finding was associated with trauma. For this reason, we consulted the general surgeons and pediatricians and requested radiology for abdominal ultrasonography. The radiologist confirmed ileocolic intussusception; fortunately, enteric perfusion was preserved, and other complications were not noted (Fig. 2). We decided to perform air reduction, after which the intussusception was successfully reduced. The patient was hospitalized in the pediatric ward for observation. Two days later, she was discharged to home without relapse or complication.

Fig. 1.

Pre-reduction abdominal radiography reveals a mass-like lesion in the right upper quadrant.

Fig. 2.

Ultrasonographic color Doppler image reveals ileocolic intussusception with preserved enteric perfusion.

DISCUSSION

Incidence and etiology

Intussusception is a well-known medical condition, but traumatic intussusception is extremely rare. The mechanism underlying traumatic intussusception is unknown but has been proposed to be either a pathological peristaltic wave, localized spasm of a bowel segment, intramural hematoma, or edema after the trauma [4]. The present case had no history of abdominal disease and no structural abnormalities such as bowel wall edema or hematoma; therefore, we suggested that the cause was pathological peristalsis or localized spasm.

Clinical characteristics and diagnosis

Classical intussusceptions commonly occur in the ileocolic region, with symptoms of intermittent cramping abdominal pain, a palpable abdominal mass, nausea, bloody stool, and fever. However traumatic intussusception presented with different clinical manifestations. The small bowel is commonly involved, and hematochezia and a palpable abdominal mass are present in less than half the cases [2]. In previous studies, intussusceptions occurred most often near the ileoileal (4 cases), jejunoileal (3 cases), or jejunojejunal (1 case) bowel segments. Interestingly, the ileocolic segment was involved in the present case (Table 1) [2,3,5-10].

Characteristics of 9 children with blunt traumatic intussusception

Most diagnoses of intussusception are confirmed using abdominal ultrasonography, with sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 97.9%, 97.8%, 86.6%, and 99.7%, respectively. However, emergency physicians generally perform FAST, which does not examine the bowel, in trauma patients instead of routine ultrasonography. Therefore, intussusception may be misdiagnosed, unless we pay attention to abdominal pain.

Treatment and outcome

Traumatic intussusceptions are usually treated with surgery (manual reduction, bowel resection, and hematoma removal) [2]. Only 1 patient was managed conservatively with nasogastric tube decompression, bowel rest, total parenteral nutrition, and close monitoring in the pediatric intensive care unit [3]. In our case, successful radiological reduction was performed using pneumatic reduction. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of air reduction performed for traumatic intussusception. We suggest that air reduction can be performed depending on the location of the lesion. This case is unique, considering an intussusception involving the ileocolic segment where air reduction is appropriate. Furthermore, ultrasonography revealed no other complications associated with blunt trauma. In all of the traumatic intussusceptions found in our literature review, the outcomes were favorable with no reports of complications.

Notes

No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

References

1. Bines JE, Liem NT, Justice FA, et al. Risk factors for intussusception in infants in Vietnam and Australia: adenovirus implicated, but not rotavirus. J Pediatr 2006;149:452–60.
2. Erichsen D, Sellstrom H, Andersson H. Small bowel intussusception after blunt abdominal trauma in a 6-year-old boy: case report and review of 6 cases reported in the literature. J Pediatr Surg 2006;41:1930–2.
3. Lu SJ, Goh PS. Traumatic intussusception with intramural haematoma. Pediatr Radiol 2009;39:403–5.
4. Komadina R, Smrkolj V. Intussusception after blunt abdominal trauma. J Trauma 1998;45:615–6.
5. Kennedy CH. Ileal intussusception following severe trauma. Lancet 1920;1:1008–9.
6. Mitchell DA. Traumatic intussusception. Br Med J 1925;18:734.
7. Badertscher VA. Traumatic triple intussusception of the ileum of a child. JAMA 1939;112:422–3.
8. Isbister WH. Enteric intussusception after acute trauma. Am J Surg 1970;120:101–2.
9. LeBlanc KE. Jejuno-jejunal intussusception in a hemophiliac: a case report. Ann Emerg Med 1982;11:149–51.
10. Saxena AK, Sodhi KS, Khandelwal S, Rao KL, Suri S. Blunt abdominal trauma: an unusual cause of intussusception. Pediatr Radiol 2004;34:364.

Article information Continued

Notes

Capsule Summary

What is already known

The typical presentation of intussusception is intermittent severe abdominal pain, vomiting, rectal bleeding, and the presence of an abdominal mass.

What is new in the current study

The symptoms of traumatic intussusception may not be typical and greater attention is needed to avoid delayed diagnosis.

Fig. 1.

Pre-reduction abdominal radiography reveals a mass-like lesion in the right upper quadrant.

Fig. 2.

Ultrasonographic color Doppler image reveals ileocolic intussusception with preserved enteric perfusion.

Table 1.

Characteristics of 9 children with blunt traumatic intussusception

Reference Sex Age (yr) Abdominal pain Vomiting Abdominal mass Bloody stool Location Treatment Extraintestinal organ damage Outcome
Kennedy [5] M 6 Yes Yes Yes No Ileoileal MR None Uncomplicated
Mitchell [6] F 10 Yes Yes No No Jejunoileal MR None Uncomplicated
Badertscher[7] M 9 Yes No No No Ileoileal MR None Uncomplicated
Isbister [8] M 10 Yes No No No Jejunoileal MR None Uncomplicated
LeBlanc [9] M 8 Yes Yes Yes No Jejunoileal MR after HR Pancreatitis Uncomplicated
Saxena et al. [10] F 4 Yes Yes No No Ileoileal BR after MR None Uncomplicated
Erichsen et al. [2] M 6 Yes Yes Yes Yes Ileoileal BR after MR None Uncomplicated
Lu et al. [3] M 12 Yes Yes No No Jejunojejunal Conservative Pancreatitis Uncomplicated
Present study F 4 Yes No No No Ileocolic AR None Uncomplicated

MR, manual reduction; HR, hematoma removal; BR, bowel resection; AR, air reduction.