AI Article Synopsis

  • Herniation of the bowel through the foramen of Winslow is a rare condition, making up only 8% of internal hernias, and often presents as small bowel obstruction.
  • The diagnosis is challenging and can lead to high mortality due to delayed identification, as symptoms are not always typical and imaging techniques like CT scans may fail to reveal the issue.
  • A case involving a 25-year-old man highlights these diagnostic difficulties, where he exhibited abdominal pain without common obstruction indicators; surgery ultimately revealed a gangrenous internal hernia needing resection despite normal preliminary tests.

Article Abstract

Herniation of the bowel through the foramen of Winslow is rare and accounts for 8% of all internal herniae. It typically presents clinically and biochemically as small bowel obstruction. It carries a high mortality as diagnosis is often delayed, despite bowel strangulation, as clinical signs are not typical and imaging may not be diagnostic. In the case presented here, a healthy 25-year-old man was admitted with sudden onset right-sided abdominal and back pain. He denied vomiting, and had opened his bowels. His bloods were normal and venous lactate <2; CT was not diagnostic. At laparotomy, he was found to have internal herniation of the terminal ileum through the foramen of Winslow, which was gangrenous and required resection. This paper discusses the difficulty in diagnosing internal herniation and poses the question as to whether we are too dependent on CT findings in the setting of an acute abdomen.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4691907PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2015-212269DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The case report discusses Blandin's hernia, a rare and serious condition involving a hernia through Winslow's hiatus, and highlights a successful laparoscopic surgical approach used in a 63-year-old female patient.* -
  • The patient experienced 24 hours of abdominal pain and nausea, leading to a CT scan that revealed a herniated cecum and terminal ileum, requiring a laparoscopic right colectomy after clearing colon contents.* -
  • The case emphasizes the effectiveness of laparoscopic techniques in treating this type of hernia, underlining the importance of early imaging diagnosis to prevent severe complications.*
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Internal hernias account for a minority of cases of intestinal obstruction. Within this group, internal hernias through the foramen of Winslow (FW) are an even rarer subcategory with a paucity of cases reported in the literature. We present a case of a 48-year-old female presenting with right upper quadrant pain akin to biliary colic with sonographic evidence of cholelithiasis.

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Internal hernias, in particular, hernia of the foramen of Winslow, are rare and occur in typical sites. Laparotomy is common in these cases while laparoscopic surgery is rarely used in such urgent cases. However, modern diagnosis and treatment including computed tomography and laparoscopy allowing minimally invasive interventions are not an exception for patients with hernia of the foramen of Winslow.

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