Congenital anorectal malformations are relatively common, and associated genitourinary malformations have been reported in up to 40% of patients. Uterovaginal malformations are also not rare in children. They are known to occur with increased frequency in children with anorectal malformations, but the diagnosis may still be difficult. We report herein one such case of anorectal malformation associated with congenital total absence of the vagina in which the uterovaginal malformation was not diagnosed until the operative repair of the anorectal malformation. The operative procedure was thereafter directed, along with the anorectoplasty, towards restoring a functional uterovaginal tract. Review of the literature revealed that such a diagnosis is unsuspected or delayed in more than half of affected patients. Furthermore, these patients present with many diagnostic and therapeutic problems. Our report highlights the need to be aware of this condition to allow for an earlier diagnosis and appropriate operative treatment.
The persistent cloaca is one of the most complex and challenging developmental malformations. It is a rare anomaly occurring only in the female newborn and is represented by the association of urogenital sinus with an anorectal malformation (ARM). Each case is probably unique. We report here one such case of cloaca with the VATER association-tracheoesophageal fistula (TOF) with a urogenital sinus, rectovaginal fistula, and an anteposed stenosed anus, along with preaxial syndactyly of the right hand. The spine, renal, and cardiac systems were normal. Interim management was directed towards repair of the TOF and a right transverse defunctioning colostomy. Despite thorough radioendoscopic preoperative investigations, the complexity of the cloacal anomaly was not delineated until surgery. This case is a rather rare combination of an intermediate form of the cloacal-ARM spectrum. Such patients present with many diagnostic and therapeutic problems. Interval surgery should be directed towards decompression of the affected organ systems, and definitive surgery must be carefully planned and, whenever possible, done in a single stage with simultaneous multisystem repair to correct all significant malformations related to the cloacal complex.
The purpose of this study was to analyse the early and late results of paediatric liver transplantation (LT), with particular reference to complications that required surgical intervention. The charts of all children who underwent LT between 1990 and 2002 were reviewed retrospectively. Results were analysed with a minimum follow up of 9 months. Thirty-five children have undergone 38 LTs; 22 received grafts from their parents, 16 received cadaveric organs and three children had retransplantation. The ages of the children ranged from 12 to 168 months. Biliary atresia was the most frequent indication for transplant (n=27). Twenty-seven children had complications that required surgical or radiological interventional procedures. Vascular complications included hepatic artery thrombosis (n=2), hepatic vein (HV) thrombosis (n=1), and the majority being portal vein thrombosis (n=6). Bile leaks were observed in eight children. Other complications included intestinal perforation (n=2), intra-abdominal abscesses (n=1), wound dehiscence (n=2), post-operative bleed (n=2), intestinal obstruction (n=2), ventral hernia (n=1), and multiple abdominal wound sinuses (n=1). Three children underwent retransplantation, two for hepatic artery thrombosis with multiple episodes of cholangitis and intrahepatic biliomas and the third was done for hepatic vein thrombosis. Patient and graft survival at 1 year is 81.5 and 74.2%, respectively. Paediatric LT is associated with significant morbidity, the main complications being vascular and biliary.
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