2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2004.02.046
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Congenital segmental dilatation of the small bowel

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Abdominal distension and vomiting are common symptoms [3]. Anemia as well as solitary gastrointestinal bleeding have been reported in older children [2,3,5,8,11]. Our patient was symptomatic at an early age but misrecognition led to severe cachexia and detection of the definitive diagnosis only at the age of 9 years, which makes him, to our knowledge, the oldest case of dilatation in its jejunal form.…”
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confidence: 63%
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“…Abdominal distension and vomiting are common symptoms [3]. Anemia as well as solitary gastrointestinal bleeding have been reported in older children [2,3,5,8,11]. Our patient was symptomatic at an early age but misrecognition led to severe cachexia and detection of the definitive diagnosis only at the age of 9 years, which makes him, to our knowledge, the oldest case of dilatation in its jejunal form.…”
mentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Congenital segmental dilatation (CSD) of the small bowel is a rare cause of neonatal intestinal obstruction [1,7,8] and is associated with various degrees of intestinal obstruction [3]. CSD most frequently involves the small bowel [3], mainly the ileum and exceptionally the jejunum, duodenum or Meckel's diverticulum [3,5,12].…”
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confidence: 99%
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