Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant Abdominoschisis

Abdominal wall defects (AWDs) represent a wide spectrum of congenital anomalies which are characterized by a herniation of abdominal organs through a pathologic opening in the abdominal region. The author describes a 29-year-old pregnant woman who was prenatally found to have a living female fetus w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bartos V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-12-01
Series:Acta Medica Martiniana
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/acm-2020-0015
_version_ 1819276147026821120
author Bartos V.
author_facet Bartos V.
author_sort Bartos V.
collection DOAJ
description Abdominal wall defects (AWDs) represent a wide spectrum of congenital anomalies which are characterized by a herniation of abdominal organs through a pathologic opening in the abdominal region. The author describes a 29-year-old pregnant woman who was prenatally found to have a living female fetus with a giant omphalocele and a spinal deformation in the lumbosacral region. An evisceration of the abdominal contents into the amnionic cavity was visible. Based on USG findings the limb-body wall complex was suggested. An amniocentesis was performed and a genetic testing identified a chromosome 17q23.1–q23.2 duplication. As the fetal anomaly was considered incompatible with life, a medical termination of the pregnancy was carried out. Postmortem examination of the fetus revealed a huge abdominoschisis with a complete evisceration of the liver, stomach, small and large intestines, spleen, and the right kidney. A severe left-sided scoliosis deformity of the spine with crooked trunk was evident. The gross findings shared the features of omphalocele and limb-body wall complex with no postnatal life expectancy. Most fetal AWDs have poor prognosis. The pathology of these conditions differ greatly and require specific prenatal evaluation and pregnancy management for each entity. Accurate assessment of AWDs will allow the identification of isolated forms with better clinical outcomes compared to associated multiple malformations with chromosomal anomalies or genetic syndromes.
first_indexed 2024-12-23T23:35:35Z
format Article
id doaj.art-87c9fa8be2f3497095f6d1b47eaa59f2
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1335-8421
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-23T23:35:35Z
publishDate 2020-12-01
publisher Sciendo
record_format Article
series Acta Medica Martiniana
spelling doaj.art-87c9fa8be2f3497095f6d1b47eaa59f22022-12-21T17:25:52ZengSciendoActa Medica Martiniana1335-84212020-12-0120313313710.2478/acm-2020-0015Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant AbdominoschisisBartos V.0Martin Biopsy Center, Ltd., MartinAbdominal wall defects (AWDs) represent a wide spectrum of congenital anomalies which are characterized by a herniation of abdominal organs through a pathologic opening in the abdominal region. The author describes a 29-year-old pregnant woman who was prenatally found to have a living female fetus with a giant omphalocele and a spinal deformation in the lumbosacral region. An evisceration of the abdominal contents into the amnionic cavity was visible. Based on USG findings the limb-body wall complex was suggested. An amniocentesis was performed and a genetic testing identified a chromosome 17q23.1–q23.2 duplication. As the fetal anomaly was considered incompatible with life, a medical termination of the pregnancy was carried out. Postmortem examination of the fetus revealed a huge abdominoschisis with a complete evisceration of the liver, stomach, small and large intestines, spleen, and the right kidney. A severe left-sided scoliosis deformity of the spine with crooked trunk was evident. The gross findings shared the features of omphalocele and limb-body wall complex with no postnatal life expectancy. Most fetal AWDs have poor prognosis. The pathology of these conditions differ greatly and require specific prenatal evaluation and pregnancy management for each entity. Accurate assessment of AWDs will allow the identification of isolated forms with better clinical outcomes compared to associated multiple malformations with chromosomal anomalies or genetic syndromes.https://doi.org/10.2478/acm-2020-0015anterior wall defectsgastroschisisomphalocelelimb-body wall syndrome
spellingShingle Bartos V.
Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant Abdominoschisis
Acta Medica Martiniana
anterior wall defects
gastroschisis
omphalocele
limb-body wall syndrome
title Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant Abdominoschisis
title_full Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant Abdominoschisis
title_fullStr Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant Abdominoschisis
title_full_unstemmed Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant Abdominoschisis
title_short Congenital Abdominal Wall Defects: A Topic Review and a Case Report of a Lethal Polymalformation Syndrome with a Giant Abdominoschisis
title_sort congenital abdominal wall defects a topic review and a case report of a lethal polymalformation syndrome with a giant abdominoschisis
topic anterior wall defects
gastroschisis
omphalocele
limb-body wall syndrome
url https://doi.org/10.2478/acm-2020-0015
work_keys_str_mv AT bartosv congenitalabdominalwalldefectsatopicreviewandacasereportofalethalpolymalformationsyndromewithagiantabdominoschisis