Hirschsprung Disease Part II with Dr. Marc Levitt podcast cover art
34 Views
0 Likes
0 Shares
0 Comments

Colorectal Channel

View profile →

Hirschsprung Disease Part II with Dr. Marc Levitt

Published:

Topic overview

Dr. Marc Levitt discusses management of post-pull-through complications in Hirschsprung disease patients, focusing on recurrent enterocolitis in a 2-year-old. Covers evaluation strategies including contrast studies and examination under anesthesia, plus anatomic causes of obstruction such as distal strictures, obstructing cuffs, and Duhamel pouch dysfunction.

Key takeaways

  • Post-pull-through Hirschsprung patients divide into two distinct types: obstruction (cannot empty) vs soiling—enterocolitis suggests obstruction.
  • Enterocolitis in infants post-pull-through is common due to tight sphincters; after age 1, persistent enterocolitis warrants full evaluation.
  • Evaluation of obstructive post-pull-through: contrast enema + exam under anesthesia to identify stricture, obstructing cuff, or Duhamel pouch.
  • Soave cuff complications (scarring, fusion, inadequate splitting) remain a cause of obstruction even as cuff length has decreased over time.
  • Duhamel pouch can cause obstruction if too large or if connecting ganglionic bowel is weak—inherently atonic anatomy requires careful sizing.

Keywords

Hashtags

Transcript

Click "Show Transcript" to view the full text (40746 characters)

Comments

Loading comments...