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Fecaloma



Fecaloma
Classification & external resources
ICD-10 K38.1
ICD-9 560.39

A fecaloma (meaning a tumor made of feces, also called fecalith and coprolith, i.e., stones made of feces) is a hardening of feces into stones of varying size inside the colon, which may appear whenever chronic obstruction of transit occurs, such as in megacolon and chronic constipation. Some diseases, such as Chagas disease, Hirschsprung's disease and others provoke the destruction of the autonomic nervous system inside the colon's mucosa (Auerbach's plexus) and may cause extremely large (giant) fecalomas, which must be surgically removed (disimpaction). Normally, however, fecalomas can be manually disimpacted or by passing colonic tubes (catheters which carry a flow of disimpaction fluid (solvent).

Fecal impaction may have severe and even lethal effects, such as the rupture of the colon's walls by acute angles of the fecalomas (stercoral perforation), followed by septicemia. A fecolith is also usually the cause of acute appendicitis.

See also

  • Fecal impaction

References

Creason N, Sparks D. Fecal impaction: a review. Nurs Diagn. 2000 Jan-Mar;11(1):15-23. Review. PMID 10847055

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fecaloma". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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