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EUPSA/ERNICA

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How is Hirschsprung's Disease diagnosed? An ERNICA animation for parents and families

Video Published 2023-12-19 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Educational animation for families explaining diagnostic methods for Hirschsprung disease, including clinical signs (delayed meconium passage, abdominal distension), contrast enema imaging, and rectal biopsy techniques. Covers both suction and full-thickness biopsy approaches to confirm absent ganglion cells and guide surgical planning.

Key Takeaways

  • Hirschsprung's disease presents with failure to pass meconium, vomiting, and abdominal distension in newborns.
  • Contrast enema shows characteristic narrow rectum with dilated proximal colon, unlike normal anatomy.
  • Rectal biopsy (suction or full-thickness) confirming absent ganglion cells is essential for definitive diagnosis.
  • Relief after rectal irrigation suggests short-segment disease; no relief may indicate long-segment Hirschsprung's.
  • Definitive treatment involves surgical resection of aganglionic bowel with pull-through anastomosis to anal canal.

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