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Omphalocele

Origin from the Greek word


Omphalos meaning center of the
world

Copyright, 1996 Dale Carnegie & Jump to first page


Introduction
Abdominal Wall defects
3 subtypes
Gastroschisis
Omphalocele
Hernia of the umbilical cord

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Introduction
Integrity of the fetal abdominal wall
development depends on
appropriate craniocaudal and
lateral infolding of the embryonic
disk.

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Introduction
The migration and fusion of the
cranial, caudal and lateral folds
normally result in an intact
umbilical ring by 5 weeks
gestation.

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Introduction
Partial or complete arrest of this
process is believed to result in
omphalocele.

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Introduction
Failure of migration and fusion of
the lateral abdominal folds is
associated with the formation of a
central abdominal omphalocele
with insertion of the umbilical cord
onto the central omphalocele sac
with a surrounding fascial defect.

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Omphalocele
Defect is covered by a surrounding
membrane (peritoneum and
amnion)
Umbilical cord inserts into the sac
Typically contain bowel and/or
liver, stomach and spleen

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Types of Omphalocele
Central - failure of fusion of lateral
folds
Epigastric - failure of fusion of
lateral and cephalic folds
Hypogastric - failure of fusion of
caudal and cephalic folds

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Omphalocel
e
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California Birth Defects
Monitoring Program

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Comparison
OMPHALOCELE GASTROSCHISIS

1:4,000 to 10,000
1:20,000 to 30,000
Covering sac present
Covering sac absent
Cord onto sac
Cord onto abdominal
wall
Herniated bowel Bowel edematous,
normal
matted
NEC if sac ruptured NEC 18%
Failure of migration Failure of return of
and fusion of folds wk 3 midgut to abdomen by
to 5 wk 10
Anomalies 45 to 55 % Anomalies 10 to 15%
Survival 20%/70% Survival 70-90%

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Omphalocele

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Gastroschisis

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Associated GI
Anomalies
Midgut volvulus
Meckel diverticulum
Intestinal atresia
Intestinal duplication
Malrotation

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Giant Omphalocele

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Chromosomal
Anomalies
Amniocentesis is indicated when
an omphalocele is identified in a
fetus, because approximately 30
percent of fetuses with an
omphalocele have a chromosome
abnormality.

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Chromosomal
Anomalies
The most common chromosomal
abnormalities are
Trisomy 18
Trisomy 13
Trisomy 21
Turner syndrome (45, X)
Triploidy

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Chromosomal
Anomalies
Fibrochondrogenesis
Amnion rupture sequence
Carpenter syndrome
CHARGE association
Duplication 3q syndrome
Fryns syndrome
Hydrolethalus syndrome
Killian/Teschler-Nicola syndrome
Marshall-Smith, Meckel-Gruber, Melnick-
Needles, Miller-Dieker, Oto-Palato-Digital II.

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Associated Anomalies
Another syndrome that may be
associated with an omphalocele is
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome.

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Beckwith Wiedemann
Syndrome
The cardinal features of this
disorder are Exomphalos,
Macroglossia, and Gigantism in
the neonate.
This was the origin of the initialism
EMG syndrome, used earlier as
the preferred designation.

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Beckwith Wiedemann
Syndrome
Associated features - gigantism,
macroglossia, visceromegaly.
Developmental abnormalities - Wilms tumor,
congenital heart defects, hemihypertrophy
Inheritance - may be AD but expressed only
in individuals who inherit it from their mother.
Caused by mutation at 11p15.5
Pathogenesis of the disease - involves
deregulation of imprinted genes in the region

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Genetics of BWS
Expression of an allele depends on its
parental origin.
Disease can occur if the normally
expressed allele is absent or mutated:
Deletion
Uniparental disomy
Chromosome rearrangement
Mutation which leads to loss of
expression

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Beckwith-Wiedemann
Syndrome
Macrosomia, large muscle mass, accelerated
bony maturation
Macroglossia, prominent eyes, large fontanels,
prominent occiput
Linear fissures lobule of external ear,
indentations on posterior rim of helix
Large kidneys, medullary dysplasia
Pancreatic hyperplasia with excess of islets
Focal adrenocortical cytomegaly
Polycythemia, hypoglycemia, cryptorchidism,
isolated cardiomegaly, diaphragmatic eventration

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6 month old
infant
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Beckwith-Wiedemann
Syndrome
Hepatomegaly, hemihypertrophy
Adrenal carcinoma, Wilms tumor
Gonadoblastoma, hepatoblastoma,
large ovaries, hyperplastic uterus
and bladder, bicornuate uterus,
hypospadias
Immunodeficiency
Cardiac hamartoma, focal
cardiomyopathy

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Exstrophy of Cloaca
Sequence
Incomplete closure of caudal and
lateral folds
Cloacal or bladder exstrophy
Hypogastric omphalocele
Vesicointestinal fissure,
imperforate anus, colonic agenesis

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???

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Omphalocele

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Associated Anomalies
Pentalogy of Cantrell
Failure of closure of lateral and
cephalic folds
Sternal defect (cleft sternum)
Diaphragmatic defect (anterior
midline)
Pericardial defect (absence)
Abdominal wall defect (omphalocele)
Cardiac anomaly (ectopia cordis)

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Associated Anomalies
Other anomalies are identified in
approximately 67 to 88 percent of
fetuses with an omphalocele.
The prognosis of the fetus often
depends on the presence of
associated anomalies.

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Gastroschisis
Small abdominal wall defect,
lateral to the umbilicus
Umbilical cord attached to
abdominal wall to the left of
defect
No limiting sac, viscera often
limited to small intestine and
ascending colon

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Gastroschisis

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Gastroschisis
Ischemic compromise due to
compression of mesenteric blood
vessels when defect is small
Serositis and serosal peel result
from amniotic fluid exposure
Ischemic changes and atresia are
late events related to mesenteric
constriction

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Hernia of the Umbilical
Cord
Occurs later in gestation
At 8 to 11 weeks, normal
contracture of the umbilical ring
occurs
Accompanied by return of the
midgut to the abdominal cavity
Failure of umbilical ring contracture

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Hernia of the Umbilical Cord

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Hernia of the Umbilical
Cord
Small fascial defect, less than 4 cm
An intact umbilical ring
Generally, only small intestinal
herniation
Low cord clamping can cause
intestinal injury (small defect, failure
to appreciate herniated intestine)

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Management
Advances in obstetric ultrasound have
allowed the diagnosis of abdominal wall
defects in utero
Karyotype analysis when appropriate
A large omphalocele, a syndrome- associated
omphalocele, Trisomy syndromes, or severe
associated anomalies allows counseling for
termination of pregnancy

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Management
In addition, prenatal diagnosis
improves management by allowing
maternal transport for labor and
delivery at a tertiary center
PLAN AHEAD

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Management
These infants have excessive heat, fluid
and protein losses which must be
replaced
Increased risk of contamination
because of the absence of a protective
barrier
Complete physical examination
Attention to euglycemia
Call the friendly neighborhood surgeons

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Management
Primary repair of ventral wall defect
with complete reduction
Staged reduction of herniated viscera
large defects containing liver and
intestine
Skin-flap closure without ventral wall repair
multiple complex congenital anomalies
Nonsurgical methods
uncorrectable congenital anomalies

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Umbilical scar after repair of Omphalocele

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