Unidentified vomiting of the “hot” – arterial oppression syndrome in the intestinal membrane
Definitions
An artery syndrome (suberiomesentic artery syndrome, SMART) refers to a series of twelve fingers of the artery of the intestinal membrane that oppresses the movement of the intestinal artery and the abdominal aorexus, causing partial or total incapacitation of the intestinal intestine, also known as gland bruising of the larvae, often combined with walnuts. The incidence rate is only 0.1 per thousand – 0.3 per thousand, which is better for adolescents than for women.
Anatomical structure An artery on the intestinal membrane at approximately L1 levels originated in the abdominal aortone, with a normal angle of 25 – 60° and a distance of 10 – 28 mm from the abdominal aortone. The dodecalogue segment is between the angles of the two, which are normally filled with intestinal membrane fats, lymphoma knots, etc. without pressure. When the angle is < 15° or spacing < 8mm, the intestinal membrane artery oppresses the larvae level, leading to a narrow cavity and obstruction.
III. Causes of illness 1, congenital factors: SMA pathologies: origin position is too low or small; 12-finger intestines is too short or treitz lactation (triple radon) is too short, bringing the 12-finger intestine level close to the root of the gap between SMA and AO. 2 Post-mortem factors: excess wasting due to non-disease factors: overweight, children ‘ s recent axle is growing too fast; wasting and fat consumption due to diseases such as neuron anorexia, insorption, high metabolism (bums, major surgery, malignant neoplasm, acetosis, tuberculosis, Krohn disease) etc.; deformity of the frontal vertebrae, narrowing of the gap between the spine and the veins; and external pressure on the abdominal, such as the fixing of hips.
Clinical symptoms 1, acute symptoms: less common, mainly in children. The treatment of conventional drugs is ineffective, as demonstrated by the large amount of vomiting for unknown reasons. If symptoms do not improve for a long period of time, they can cause serious complications such as acute stomach expansion, intestinal necrosis, perforation of the 12-finger intestine, haemorrhage in the upper digestive tract, sepsis of the door and sepsis of the door. Chronic Symptoms: More commonly, the main symptoms are vomiting, most of which occurs after eating, and vomiting is chord and food. Symptoms are intermittently repeated, irritated for long or short periods, and can be mitigated by a change in body position, such as a side, a push, a chest knee, etc. When vomiting, it is not accompanied by abdominal pain, or only suffocating. During the mitigation period, there may be signs of saturation, fatigue, weakness, sensibilities, anorexia and emotional instability, while prolonged and repeated vomiting leads to wasting, dehydration and overall malnutrition.
Image expression 1, X-line expression: The gastrointestinal cuisine can be seen in the near end of the 12-finger bowel extension, with repeated strong backsliding, and the transistor can flow back into the stomach; there is an exterior slant and transistor blockage on the far side of the trough, known as “pent rods”; such as an ingestion of a bellow that cannot be removed from the meadow after 2-4 hours, i.e. a barrier, such as the disappearance of the twirls when the patient takes a fall or the left side of the bed, which is helpful for the diagnosis of this synthesis. CT Performance: CT Enhanced Scanning or Angiography can directly show the position of the aorta and abdominal aorexus and anatomics in the intestinal membrane, the position of the membrane aorta and anatomic anatomics, and the resistance of the membrane aorta (<15°) and the reduction of the space (<8mm); the <8mm) in the membrane anortic aortic aortic aortic aortics is subject to narrow pressure, and the gaseous plane is visible. 3. Ultrasound expression: the ultrasound is a good display of the artery and abdominal aorexus in the intestinal membrane and can measure the angles between them, and can also provide a real-time dynamic observation of the molaring of the meridian and its cavity internal diameter in the SMA rear; the ultrasound is expressed in: the rim between SMA and AO < 15°, the width between < 8 mm; SMA rear-twenty finger bowels under pressure, with a diameter of less than 1.0 cm for the 12m in the department, and an extension of more than 3 cm for the immediate end of the 12-tip bowels, with a “fiscal” or “slugger” form.
Treatment 1, internal medicine: non-surgery treatment should be used first for persons diagnosed as an aneurological stress syndrome in the intestinal membrane. The acute dysentery is treated with symptoms such as fasting, gastrointestinal pressure, intravenous nutrients, anti-convulsive drugs and, when the symptoms are mitigated, the ingestionable diet, with less food, is gradually replaced by soft food, followed by subsidence, knee chest or left-side rest, for about half an hour, and the emptied intestinal nutrients can be placed across the oppressed area (the 12-finger bowel level) to provide adequate nutritional support. The aim of treatment is to increase weight and post-peritoneal fat. Surgery: Long duration, severe symptoms, severe expansion in the octopus, and non-surgery invalids require surgical treatment in order to remove the barrier directly. The procedure consists of: Strong, which brings lax larvae to the intestine by cutting Treitz ‘ s resilience; gastrointestinal cortex, which lifts the larvae to the stomach and provides a lateral-side-side alignment; and a 12-legic cortal cortex, which allows for the complete retention or severing of the larvae, and the near-end empty intestine up through the right side of the colon membrane, with the application of the larvae-side alignment.
Prevention 1. Maintaining healthy weight: Avoiding excessive weight loss or disease-induced excess wasting. (c) A proper diet that ensures nutritional balance and avoids low body fat levels due to malnutrition, especially among young people and women, the two groups being high-precedented groups of SMART. 2. Attention to physical development: For children, attention should be paid to the axle growth of their bodies in order to avoid excessive growth. If a child is found to have abnormal physical development, he/she should be examined in a timely manner. 3. Prevention of spinal malformations: Maintaining the right position and standing, avoiding long-term bending on the back of a hunch or other bad position, and preventing spinal problems such as pre-vertebrae deformities, in order to reduce the risk of narrowing the gap between the spine and the vascular. 4. Avoiding abdominal stress: In everyday life, care must be taken to avoid external pressure on the abdomen, for example, by avoiding long periods of tight hips.
Disgusting and vomiting.