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Fig. 3 | Surgical Case Reports

Fig. 3

From: Neodymium magnets migrated into an internal supravesical hernia: a rare case of foreign body ingestion in children

Fig. 3

Laparoscopic findings. A The cecum adhered to the retroperitoneum between the right medial umbilical fold and the right wall of the urinary bladder (yellow arrowhead), making us suspect internal SH. B The FB (yellow arrowhead)remained in the retroperitoneal space in the pelvic cavity. C The FB was easily pulled out using intestinal forceps and identified as a combined two NMs. No intestinal tissue was found between the two magnetic bodies. D The perforated cecum was repaired from the umbilical wound by direct vision, and the retroperitoneal wall (yellow arrowhead) was repaired laparoscopically with absorbable sutures. B bladder, C cecum, EIA external iliac artery, MUF medial umbilical fold, TI terminal ileum, TVF transverse vesical fold

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