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 Hirschsprung’s disease

 

  • Illustrations
  • Alternative names
  • Definition
  • Causes, incidence, and risk factors
  • Symptoms
  • Signs and tests
  • Treatment
  • Expectations (prognosis)
  • Complications
  • Calling your health care provider
Illustrations Digestive system Large intestine

Alternative names    Return to top

Congenital megacolon

Definition    Return to top

Hirschsprung's disease is an obstruction of the large intestine caused by inadequate motility (muscular movement of the bowel) that occurs as a congenital (present at birth) condition.

Causes, incidence, and risk factors    Return to top

Digested matter normally passes through the intestine as a result of the rhythmic contraction of the muscles that line the gut (peristalsis). These muscles are stimulated to contract by nerve bundles, called ganglia, located between the muscle layers.

In Hirschsprung's disease, the ganglia are missing, usually from only a few centimeters of bowel, but sometimes from long segments of bowel. Segments in which there is no peristalsis will not pass any digested matter beyond that point. The result is that the bowel cannot push material through and is effectively obstructed.

Intestinal contents accumulate behind the obstruction, causing the bowel and abdomen to become distended. If the condition is severe, the newborn may fail to pass meconium or stool, and the newborn may vomit.

Milder cases may not be diagnosed until a later age. In older children, the disease may be characterized by chronic constipation, abdominal distention, and decreased growth rate.

Hirschsprung's disease causes one fourth of all newborn intestinal obstruction, but the condition may not be detected until later in infancy or childhood. It occurs 5 times more frequently in males than in females. Hirschsprung's disease is sometimes associated with other inherited or congenital conditions such as Down syndrome.

Symptoms    Return to top

  • Failure to pass meconium shortly after birth
  • Failure to pass a first stool within 24 - 48 hours after birth
  • Constipation
  • Abdominal distention
  • Vomiting
  • Watery diarrhea (in the newborn)
  • Poor weight gain
  • Slow growth (child 0-5 years)
  • Malabsorption

Signs and tests    Return to top

During a physical examination, the doctor may be able to feel loops of bowel in the distended abdomen. A rectal examination may detect a loss of muscle tone in the rectal muscles.

Tests used in the diagnosis of Hirschsprung's disease include:

  • Abdominal x-ray, showing distention of colon with gas and feces
  • Barium enema
  • Anal manometry (a balloon is dilated in the rectum to measure the anal sphincter pressure)
  • Rectal biopsy, showing absence of ganglion nerve cells

Treatment    Return to top

The abnormal section of colon must be surgically removed. Sometimes this can be accomplished with a single operation. However, it is frequently performed as a two-staged procedure with a colostomy being performed at the time of diagnosis, and a definitive procedure being performed later in the first year of life.

Expectations (prognosis)    Return to top

Symptoms are eliminated in 90% of children after surgical treatment. A better outcome is associated with early treatment, and shorter bowel segment involvement.

Complications    Return to top

  • Perforation of the intestine
  • Enterocolitis
  • Short gut syndrome

Calling your health care provider    Return to top

Call your child's health care provider if symptoms suggestive of Hirschsprung's disease develop.

Call your child's health care provider if abdominal pain or other new symptoms develop after treatment for Hirschsprung's disease.








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