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Pediatr Dev Pathol ; 26(1): 77-85, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36457257

RESUMO

Hirschsprung disease (HD) is characterized by circumferential aganglionosis of the rectum with variable proximal bowel involvement. The underlying pathogenesis is due to failure of caudal migration of neural crest cells during pre-natal development, causing functional bowel obstruction. Definitive therapy is surgical resection; however, a subset of patients will require reoperation. An important cause of reoperation is the rare but distinct entity described as the ganglion cell "vanishing" phenomenon. In this phenomenon, affected patients have normal circumferential ganglion cells present at the proximal margin during primary resection. They undergo a variable asymptomatic period post-primary resection but ultimately develop recurrent symptoms. Upon reoperation, ganglion cells seemingly vanish and are no longer present in the previously functioning and ganglionated bowel proximal to the initial anastomotic site. To further characterize and investigate this poorly understood pathology, here we present 2 cases of HD patients who required reoperation. Our small series implicates that an immune component may contribute as patient 2 had a brisk neurotrophic eosinophilic infiltrate only present in the reoperation specimen. However, this was not observed in patient 1. Other possible etiologies include post-operative ischemia/hypoxia, visceral neuropathy, or signaling abnormalities within the residual ganglion cells themselves.


Assuntos
Doença de Hirschsprung , Obstrução Intestinal , Humanos , Lactente , Doença de Hirschsprung/patologia , Reoperação/efeitos adversos , Reto/patologia , Obstrução Intestinal/etiologia , Margens de Excisão
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