For Healthcare Professionals

This video is restricted to verified clinicians. Log in with your healthcare-professional account to view.

Log in to view

Don't have an account? Apply here.

15 views 0 likes

StayCurrentMD

GCMD Space · View profile →

Hirschprung's Disease - Daniel von Allmen

Video Published 2018-11-10 Updated 2026-06-02

Timestops (8)

Topic Overview

Expert panel discusses diagnostic approach to suspected Hirschsprung disease in a 72-hour-old infant with abdominal distention. Consensus favors contrast enema followed by suction rectal biopsy over routine upper GI, emphasizing need for tissue diagnosis before surgery except in severe enterocolitis cases.

Key Takeaways

  • Contrast enema should be the first imaging study in newborn distal bowel obstruction, not routine upper GI, unless clinical suspicion for malrotation
  • Tissue diagnosis via suction rectal biopsy is mandatory before surgery; false-positive contrast enemas for Hirschsprung's disease do occur
  • Enterocolitis may require urgent diversion before tissue diagnosis if patient critically ill and decompression fails
  • Standard workup combines contrast enema showing transition zone with suction rectal biopsy confirming aganglionosis
  • Rectal irrigations alone without diagnostic workup are inadequate management for suspected Hirschsprung's disease

Keywords

Hashtags

Transcript

Comments

Loading comments…