Because 6- 12 in the afternoon is the only effective sleep period for the body to replenish qi and blood energy, during this period, normal people need to sleep for 70 minutes every day to achieve the balance of body energy. If you lose this 70-minute sleep time, your body's qi and blood energy will soon drop, your body will be short of blood supply, your organs will suffer from ischemia and hypoxia, and which organ will have disease symptoms.
The most common small intestinal diverticulum is Meckel diverticulum, which is found in less than 3% patients. This kind of diverticulum is congenital and prone to occur in the range of ileocecal valve1m. It is usually found by radionuclide scanning and 99m technetium barium contrast examination.
Complications of Meckel's diverticulum include bleeding, intestinal obstruction, diverticulitis, intestinal stones and tumors. Although the incidence of Meckel's diverticulum is the same for men and women, the incidence of complications is 2~3 times that of women. The types of complications are also related to age. Among the Meckel diverticulum patients younger than 10 years old, 60% have symptoms. Bleeding is more common in children, and it is rare after 30 years old. Intestinal obstruction can occur in patients of any age, and the most common cause of intestinal obstruction in children is intussusception caused by diverticulum. About 20% patients have diverticulitis, and the peak is in older children. With the increase of age, the incidence of stones and tumors increases. These complications are rare in children.
Contrary to Meckel's diverticulum, other small intestinal diverticulum is acquired, and its incidence is obviously related to age. Nearly 90% diverticulum is located in jejunum. Symptoms include vague upper abdominal or periumbilical pain, abdominal distension and premature fullness; The characteristic signs are anemia, upper abdominal distress and gas-liquid level triad seen in abdominal X-ray films. Small intestinal barium examination can often diagnose diverticulum.
The complications of small intestinal diverticulum are similar to diverticula in other parts of the intestine, including diverticulitis, bleeding and obstruction, and malnutrition caused by intestinal stagnation syndrome caused by excessive growth of bacteria caused by blind loops or intestinal content stagnation. The consequences include anemia caused by bacteria absorbing vitamin B 12 and fatty diarrhea caused by normal bile salt metabolism. For diverticulum and other complications, the affected intestinal segment can be surgically removed.