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Intestinal obstruction in neonatal/pediatric surgery.

Intestinal obstruction in the newborn infant and older child may be due to a variety of conditions, including atresia and stenosis, annular pancreas, malrotation, duplication cyst, meconium ileus, meconium plug syndrome and neonatal small left colon syndrome, Hirschsprung's disease, neoplasia, trauma, and other rarer causes. The mode of presentation can be acute or more chronic with systemic upset due to shock. Neonates, more so than older children, with unrecognized intestinal obstruction deteriorate rapidly, show an increase of associated morbidity and mortality and appropriate surgical treatment becomes more hazardous. Early diagnosis depends largely on the prompt detection of obstructive manifestations by the clinician and the subsequent accurate interpretation of radiographic findings and other investigations, leading to definitive treatment, which should always be preceded by appropriate resuscitation/preparation of the infant/child. Management of intestinal obstruction will almost always be surgical, apart from some notable exceptions and all are discussed in more detail. With the advent of pediatric and neonatal intensive care and multidisciplinary care, the morbidity and mortality of cases of intestinal obstruction reported in current series is generally extremely low and mainly determined by the coexistence of other major congenital anomalies (eg, cardiac), delays in diagnosis and treatment or coexisting medical conditions. Newer treatments and future developments may reduce the residual mortality in such cases as ultrashort-bowel syndrome.

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