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Meconium peritonitis secondary to torsion of fallopian tube cyst and transient central diabetes insipidus in a preterm infant

  • Prakash Manikoth , Avirat Vaishnav , Ninan Zachariah , Mohammed Jaffer Sajwani , Arun Kumar Nair and Mangalore Govind Pai
Published/Copyright: January 1, 2005
Journal of Perinatal Medicine
From the journal Volume 33 Issue 1

Abstract

Meconium peritonitis is a sterile chemical peritonitis caused by peritoneal seeding of meconium from an antenatal gastrointestinal perforation. We report a 32-week preterm female neonate who developed meconium peritonitis due to bowel perforation, secondary to a twisted left fallopian tube mass, which was excised and confirmed by histopathology. This association has not been reported earlier. The infant also developed transient central diabetes insipidus, a very rare condition in a preterm neonate.

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Corresponding author: Dr. Prakash Manikoth, Royal Hospital, Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, P.O. Box 1331 P.C. 111, Seeb, Muscat/Oman.

References

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Published Online: 2005-01-01
Published in Print: 2005-01-01

©2005 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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  2. Fetal and maternal Doppler velocimetry and cytokines in high-risk pregnancy
  3. IL-8 concentrations in maternal serum, amniotic fluid and cord blood in relation to different pathogens within the amniotic cavity
  4. Placental pathology and pregnancy outcomes in donor and non-donor oocyte in vitro fertilization pregnancies
  5. Blink-startle reflex habituation in 30–34-week low-risk fetuses
  6. Analysis of fetal breathing movements at 30–38 weeks of gestation
  7. Influence of perinatal factors on hematological variables in umbilical cord blood
  8. The potential of four-dimensional (4D) ultrasonography in the assessment of fetal awareness
  9. Early prognostic significance of umbilical cord troponin I in critically ill newborns. Prospective study with a control group
  10. Is the use of early nasal CPAP associated with lower rates of chronic lung disease and retinopathy of prematurity? Nine years of experience with the Vermont Oxford Neonatal Network
  11. Fetal growth restriction associated with measles virus infection during pregnancy
  12. Prenatal diagnosis of hemifacial microsomia by magnetic resonance imaging
  13. Mega-dose carbamazepine complicating third trimester of pregnancy
  14. Meconium peritonitis secondary to torsion of fallopian tube cyst and transient central diabetes insipidus in a preterm infant
  15. Congenital syphilis: β2-microglobulin in cerebrospinal fluid and diagnosis of neurosyphilis in an affected newborn
  16. Normalization of a severely abnormal ductus venosus Doppler flow velocity waveform in the presence of normal arterial flow parameters
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