A giant omphalocele is a liver-containing protrusion through an abdominal defect wider than 5 cm in diameter. The giant form with a small abdominal wall defect is a rare condition which, to our knowledge, has not been described previously. We describe three cases with the typical features of elongated vascular liver pedicle and angiomatosis of the hepatic portal system. The abnormal liver organogenesis, due to extra-abdominal development, represented a significant risk factor for hepatic thrombosis after visceral reduction and liver rotation. All the neonates underwent surgery on the first day of postnatal life. One died because of a postoperative liver infarction, and the survivors needed prolonged respiratory support. Prenatal sonographic features, timing, delivery, type of surgical repair, and postnatal outcome are reviewed. A prenatal sonographic diagnosis could be useful to evaluate the abdominal ring and serial ultrasound examinations are recommended to detect promptly ominous signs of hepatic and bowel damage. Color Doppler may be useful to assess the anatomy of the abdominal vessels and their relationships with the herniated organs, although it was not used in any of the cases reported here. This congenital malformation might be considered as a pathological entity separate from giant omphalocele with large abdominal defect, with a severe prognosis due possibly to its different embryological development.

Giant omphaloceles with a small abdominal defect: Prenatal diagnosis and neonatal management / G. Pelizzo, G. Maso, C. Dell'Oste, G. D'Ottavio, R. Bussani, F. Uxa, G. Conoscenti, J. Schleef. - In: ULTRASOUND IN OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY. - ISSN 0960-7692. - 26:7(2005), pp. 786-788.

Giant omphaloceles with a small abdominal defect: Prenatal diagnosis and neonatal management

G. Pelizzo;
2005

Abstract

A giant omphalocele is a liver-containing protrusion through an abdominal defect wider than 5 cm in diameter. The giant form with a small abdominal wall defect is a rare condition which, to our knowledge, has not been described previously. We describe three cases with the typical features of elongated vascular liver pedicle and angiomatosis of the hepatic portal system. The abnormal liver organogenesis, due to extra-abdominal development, represented a significant risk factor for hepatic thrombosis after visceral reduction and liver rotation. All the neonates underwent surgery on the first day of postnatal life. One died because of a postoperative liver infarction, and the survivors needed prolonged respiratory support. Prenatal sonographic features, timing, delivery, type of surgical repair, and postnatal outcome are reviewed. A prenatal sonographic diagnosis could be useful to evaluate the abdominal ring and serial ultrasound examinations are recommended to detect promptly ominous signs of hepatic and bowel damage. Color Doppler may be useful to assess the anatomy of the abdominal vessels and their relationships with the herniated organs, although it was not used in any of the cases reported here. This congenital malformation might be considered as a pathological entity separate from giant omphalocele with large abdominal defect, with a severe prognosis due possibly to its different embryological development.
No
English
abdominal wall defect; omphalocele; prenatal diagnosis; sonography; surgery
Settore MED/20 - Chirurgia Pediatrica e Infantile
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2005
26
7
786
788
3
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
MIUR-ALTRI-IRIS
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Giant omphaloceles with a small abdominal defect: Prenatal diagnosis and neonatal management / G. Pelizzo, G. Maso, C. Dell'Oste, G. D'Ottavio, R. Bussani, F. Uxa, G. Conoscenti, J. Schleef. - In: ULTRASOUND IN OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY. - ISSN 0960-7692. - 26:7(2005), pp. 786-788.
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
8
262
Article (author)
si
G. Pelizzo, G. Maso, C. Dell'Oste, G. D'Ottavio, R. Bussani, F. Uxa, G. Conoscenti, J. Schleef
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/723066
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