Background: Malrotation with midgut volvulus is a common surgical emergency in children. A diagnostic tool for malrotation with characteristics ideal in emergency settings such as non-invasiveness and rapidity remains a keenly debated issue among surgeons and radiologists alike.
Methods: Fifty-two pediatric patients of suspected malrotation with midgut volvulus were studied between 1998 and 2016. All patients underwent plain abdominal X-ray and Color Doppler; contrast upper gastrointestinal (GI) studywas done in some patients. All cases were operated and diagnosis was confirmed. A subset of 60 pediatric patients with nonspecific GI complaints were also examined to see relative position of superior mesenteric vein (SMV)/superior mesenteric artery (SMA) in control population.
Result: A total of 52 suspected cases of malrotation were admitted from May 1998 to November 2015, 43 had inversion of SMA/SMV and nine had SMV anterior of SMA in Color Doppler. All 43 cases of inversion of SMA/SMV were cases of malrotation after surgical confirmation; while five out of nine cases of SMV anterior to SMA had malrotation.
Conclusion: In appropriate clinical settings, Color Doppler documenting the reversal or aberrant SMV/SMA axis is not only predictive but also diagnostic of malrotation of gut.
Keywords: Mesenteric vessels; Ultrasonography; Upper GI series.