Abstract

Apple peel intestinal atresia is a rare congenital malformation. It consists of a proximal jejunum ending in a blind pouch and distal small bowel wrapped around its vascular supply in a spiral fashion. A combination of type IIIb jejunoileal atresia (apple peel atresia) and type IV (multiple intestinal atresias) is a rare entity. The diagnosis and management of such complicated cases is a challenge, especially in resource-limited settings. We report a case of a four-day-old female who presented to the neonatal intensive care unit with complaints of vomiting, yellow discoloration of the skin, and failure to pass meconium since birth. The baby was born preterm (34 weeks) via spontaneous vaginal delivery. The physical examination concluded a jaundiced and dehydrated child with a soft, non-tender abdomen and absent gut sounds. X-ray abdomen showed two air-fluid areas in the left hypochondrium. The upper gastrointestinal gastrografin study revealed that contrast opacified the third part of the duodenum and no contrast was observed beyond it. On exploratory laparotomy, proximal jejunal atresia with four distal atresias in apple peel fashion and a viable 20 cm of small bowel was observed. The apple peel segments were supplied by mesenteric vessels. Unfortunately, our patient expired despite all supportive measures. The case highlights the significance of the prenatal and early postnatal diagnosis of such a complex combination of intestinal atresias for adequate and timely management.

Highlights

  • Jejunoileal atresia (JIA) is a congenital defect in the small bowel

  • We report a case of a four-day-old female who presented to the neonatal intensive care unit with complaints of vomiting, yellow discoloration of the skin, and failure to pass meconium since birth

  • It consists of proximal jejunal atresia and a short segment of ileum spiraling around its vascular supply

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Summary

Introduction

Jejunoileal atresia (JIA) is a congenital defect in the small bowel. Along with atretic segments, it is characterized by the partial or complete absence of membranes connecting the small intestines to the mesentery producing a significant loss of bowel length. Apple peel atresia known as Christmas tree atresia is a rare variant of JIA with an incidence of 0.7%-0.8% in 10,000 live births [1]. It consists of proximal jejunal atresia and a short segment of ileum spiraling around its vascular supply. We report a case of a four-day-old female from Pakistan who presented to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) with complaints of vomiting, yellow discoloration of the skin, and no passage of meconium since birth. Small intestinal atresia (duodenal or jejunal atresia) and malrotation were kept as differentials in the diagnosis considering non-bilious vomiting and no passage of stool with an empty rectum.

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Gornall P
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