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Journal of Nippon Medical School

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-Report on Experiments and Clinical Cases-

Hirschsprung's Disease in Adults: Report of a Case and Review of the Literature

Masayuki Miyamoto1, Kaku Egami1, Shotaro Maeda2, Keiichi Ohkawa3, Noritake Tanaka3, Eiji Uchida4 and Takashi Tajiri4

1Department of Surgery, Tama-nagayama Hospital, Nippon Medical School
2Department of Pathology, Tama-nagayama Hospital, Nippon Medical School
3Department of Surgery, Chiba-hokuso Hospital, Nippon Medical School
4First Department of Surgery, Nippon Medical School


Hirschsprung's disease in the adult is a rare and frequently misdiagnosed cause of long-standing refractory constipation. We report a case of Hirschsprung's disease in a 23-year-old man and review the literature. The patient had a history of chronic constipation that required daily enemas, since early infancy, but he had remained in good health until intestinal obstruction developed. As a subemergency operation, right transverse colostomy was performed, to relieve the constipation. Histological examination, by a biopsy, showed absence of ganglion cells in the myenteric plexus in the rectum. One year later, Ikeda's modification of the Duhamel procedure was successfully performed as definitive surgery. The postoperative course was uneventful, and complete resolution of the symptoms without complications has been confirmed by a 22-year follow-up. A review of 229 cases of adult Hirschsprung's disease in the literature suggested that the Duhamel procedure is the operation of choice because of the lower postoperative morbidity rate and better functional outcome.

J Nippon Med Sch 2005; 72: 113-120

Keywords
Hirschsprung's disease, constipation, adult, Duhamel procedure

Correspondence to
Masayuki Miyamoto, Department of Surgery, Tama-nagayama Hospital, Nippon Medical School, 1-1-7 Nagayama, Tama, Tokyo 206-8512, Japan
miyamons@mvd.biglobe.ne.jp

Received, September 17, 2004
Accepted, November 16, 2004