Hirschsprung's disease | |
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Other names | Aganglionic megacolon, congenital megacolon, congenital intestinal aganglionosis[1] |
Histopathology of Hirschsprung disease showing abnormal acetylcholine esterase (AchE)-positive nerve fibers (brown) in the mucosa | |
Specialty | Medical genetics |
Symptoms | Constipation, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, slow growth[1] |
Complications | Enterocolitis, megacolon, bowel obstruction, intestinal perforation[1][2] |
Usual onset | First 2 months of life[1] |
Types | Short-segment, long-segment[1] |
Causes | Genetic[1] |
Risk factors | Family history[1] |
Diagnostic method | Based on symptoms, biopsy[3] |
Differential diagnosis | Chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction, meconium ileus[2] |
Treatment | Surgery[2] |
Frequency | 1 in 5,000 newborns[1] |
Hirschsprung's disease (HD or HSCR) is a birth defect in which nerves are missing from parts of the intestine.[1][3] The most prominent symptom is constipation.[1] Other symptoms may include vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea and slow growth.[1] Most children develop signs and symptoms shortly after birth. However, others may be diagnosed later in infancy or early childhood.[4][5] About half of all children with Hirschsprung's disease are diagnosed in the first year of life.[4] Complications may include enterocolitis, megacolon, bowel obstruction and intestinal perforation.[1][2]
The disorder may occur by itself or in association with other genetic disorders such as Down syndrome or Waardenburg syndrome.[1][2] About half of isolated cases are linked to a specific genetic mutation, and about 20% occur within families.[1] Some of these occur in an autosomal dominant manner.[1] The cause of the remaining cases is unclear.[1] If otherwise normal parents have one child with the condition, the next child has a 4% risk of being affected.[2] The condition is divided into two main types, short-segment and long-segment, depending on how much of the bowel is affected.[1] Rarely, the small bowel may be affected, as well.[2] Diagnosis is based on symptoms and confirmed by biopsy.[3]
Treatment is generally by surgery to remove the affected section of bowel.[2] The surgical procedure most often carried out is known as a "pull through".[3] Occasionally, an intestinal transplantation may be recommended.[2] Hirschsprung's disease occurs in about one in 5,000 of newborns.[1] Males are more often affected than females.[1] The condition is believed to have first been described in 1691 by Dutch anatomist Frederik Ruysch[6] and is named after Danish physician Harald Hirschsprung following his description in 1888.[7][8]