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Bilious Emesis and Failure to Pass Meconium in the Nursery: A Case Study.

Jennifer M BenczeJane A CrotteauTheresa M UrbinaElizabeth V Schulz
Published in: Neonatal network : NN (2023)
We present a case of an infant born to a mother with COVID-19, who at 24 hours of life was treated with a glycerin suppository for failure to pass meconium and went on to develop bilious emesis and abdominal distention as feeding continued over the next several hours. After a barium enema identified the distal obstruction, the pediatric surgical team used rectal irrigation to remove a large meconium plug, which mimicked the appearance of the descending colon on plain film, in a case of small left colon syndrome. Although intestinal obstruction in the newborn is rare, it is imperative that it is promptly diagnosed and treated appropriately to avoid negative outcomes; which, even in perhaps the mildest form of functional distal obstruction, meconium plug syndrome, can lead to an impressive clinical illness with risk of intestinal perforation and subsequent meconium peritonitis if the obstruction is not relieved.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • minimally invasive
  • sars cov
  • case report
  • palliative care
  • rectal cancer
  • type diabetes
  • young adults
  • low birth weight
  • weight loss