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. 1975 Sep;182(3):274–279. doi: 10.1097/00000658-197509000-00009

Necrotizing enterocolitis in the newborn: operative indications.

J A O'Neill Jr, M T Stahlman, H C Meng
PMCID: PMC1343936  PMID: 1164056

Abstract

Fifty-two premature, low birth weight infants presented mainly in the first week of life with sudden manifestations of intestinal ileus and an x-ray picture of pneumatosis intestinalis. Twenty-two of 32 patients treated with gastric decompression, antibiotics, intensive supportive therapy and intravenous hyperalimentation survived. Twenty other patients had progression of their disease and required operation. Twelve of these patients survived. Review of this material indicated that some medically treated patients might have survived if they had been operated upon. Indications for operation included free perforation and clinical signs of deterioration. Abdominal physical findings and x-rays were not reliable except as signs of far advanced pathology. Confirmation of ascites by paracentesis and gram stain of fluid was helpful when present. If patients were adequately treated and then developed sudden hyponatremia or progressive acidosis, they invariably had gangrenous bowel and required operation. The most striking finding was that a sudden, profound drop in the platelet count to levels below 100,000 reliably predicted the presence of gangrenous bowel and the need for operation. Other clotting studies indicated that disseminated intravascular coagulation is an important accompaniment of NNE with the complication of bowel gangrene prior to perforation. Gastrostomy and resection of involved bowel with staged anastomosis proved to be the most successful form of surgical management. Overall suvival was 66 per cent.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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