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Dolichocolon revisited: An inborn anatomic variant with redundancies causing constipation and volvulus.

The objective of this review is to examine whether a redundant colon gives rise to symptoms like constipation and volvulus. In 1820, Monterossi made drawings of colons with displacements and elongation of the colon found during autopsy. In 1912, Kienböeck first visualized a redundant colon using bismuth, and Lardennois and Auborg named the anatomic variant dolichocolon in 1914. The criteria were later: A sigmoid loop rising over the line between the iliac crests, a transverse colon below the same line and extra loops at the flexures. The incidence of dolichocolon is 1.9%-28.5%. Dolichocolon seems to be congenital, as fetuses, newborns, and infants exhibit colonic redundancies. Studies have identified a triade of constipation, abdominal pain, and distension. Colon transit time was recently shown to increase significantly with increased number of redundancies, which increases abdominal pain, bloating and infrequent defecation. The diagnosis of dolichocolon is established by barium enema or CT-colonography. Treatment is conservative, or surgical in case of volvulus or refractory constipation.

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