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CinciHirsch - Pathology of Hirschprung Disease

Video Published 2018-11-13 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Expert pathologists discuss the reliability of suction rectal biopsies for diagnosing Hirschsprung disease across different ages and gestational stages. Key topics include ganglion cell identification in premature infants as early as 28 weeks gestation, age-related technical challenges, and clinical decision-making for biopsy timing.

Key Takeaways

  • Ganglion cells are present in rectal submucosa at 28 weeks gestation; experienced pediatric pathologists can identify immature ganglion cells.
  • Suction rectal biopsy is technically feasible at any age but failure rate increases after 1 year due to stromal toughness and ganglion separation.
  • Most pediatric surgeons limit suction biopsy to infants under 6 months; older children typically proceed directly to OR for full-thickness biopsy.
  • Clinical presentation in older infants is often diagnostic enough that suction biopsy becomes less critical for decision-making.
  • Suction biopsy is one diagnostic element but not the sole determinant; clinical context and surgeon experience guide management approach.

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