Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/51691
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Type: Journal article
Title: Congenital mesenteric defects and unexpected death - A rare finding at autopsy
Author: Byard, R.
Wick, R.
Citation: Pediatric and Developmental Pathology, 2008; 11(3):245-248
Publisher: Springer
Issue Date: 2008
ISSN: 1093-5266
1615-5742
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Roger W. Byard and Regula Wick
Abstract: Gastrointestinal causes of sudden and/or unexpected death in the young are uncommon and only rarely involve congenital anomalies of the mesentery. Two cases are reported of unexpected deaths following herniation of intestine through congenital mesenteric defects to illustrate the forensic issues that may arise. Case 1 involves a 2.5-year-old girl who collapsed on arrival to hospital following 18 hours of fever and apparently mildly nonspecific symptoms. Resuscitation was unsuccessful, and at autopsy a segment of gangrenous small intestine was found that had herniated through a congenital mesenteric defect. Case 2 involves a 23-year-old woman with a past history of severe mental and physical disabilities who was found dead in her bed. She had a recent history of mild diarrhea and vomiting, but had not appeared particularly ill. At autopsy the peritoneal cavity was filled with a very dilated and obstructed colon as a result of herniation of a segment of sigmoid colon through a distal small intestinal mesenteric defect. These cases demonstrate that symptoms and signs of intestinal ischemia may not be clearly manifested in early childhood and that developmental delay may also result in older individuals presenting in a nonspecific manner. Although rare, congenital mesenteric abnormalities with compromise of the intestinal vasculature remain a possibility to be considered at autopsy in all cases of unexpected death, despite the lack of a clear history of significant gastrointestinal disturbance. Death may relate to ischemic compromise of either the herniated portion of intestine (as in case 1) or to the stretched intestine bordering the hernial orifice (as in case 2).
Keywords: childhood
intestinal infarction
mental impairment
mesenteric defect
sudden death
Description: Copyright © 2009 Society for Pediatric Pathology and the Paediatric Pathology Society. From 2005 onwards Pediatric and Developmental Pathology is published by Allen Press, Inc.
DOI: 10.2350/07-12-0392.1
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.2350/07-12-0392.1
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 5
Pathology publications

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