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Clinical Distinction

Surgical NEC vs. Medical NEC — Why the Distinction Matters

By The Alvarez Law Firm · June 4, 2026

Necrotizing enterocolitis is not a single disease. Pediatric surgeons and neonatologists draw an important line between the cases that can be treated with antibiotics and bowel rest alone — "medical NEC" — and the cases that require an operation, called "surgical NEC." The distinction shapes the long-term medical picture for the child, and it also shapes the case.

This guide walks through how the line is drawn, what each treatment path looks like, the long-term complications that follow surgical NEC, and why the distinction matters for families considering legal action.

How NEC Is Staged: Bell's Classification

Neonatologists categorize NEC severity using a system called Bell's staging:

Medical NEC: Treatment Without Surgery

Stage I and Stage II cases that respond to conservative treatment are called medical NEC. The standard treatment is:

Most medically managed NEC babies recover, although they often spend additional weeks in the NICU and may have feeding difficulties and slower growth afterward.

Surgical NEC: When an Operation Is Required

Stage IIIB cases — and some Stage IIIA cases that fail medical management — require surgery. The procedure is one of two:

Exploratory laparotomy with bowel resection

The surgeon opens the abdomen, identifies the dead or perforated segments of bowel, and removes them. Healthy bowel may be connected back together (primary anastomosis) or brought out as an ostomy through the abdominal wall (with a planned closure procedure weeks or months later).

The amount of bowel removed depends on how much was diseased. In severe cases, especially when the diagnosis was delayed, large portions of the intestine may need to come out.

Peritoneal drain placement

For the smallest and sickest babies, a temporary alternative is placement of a peritoneal drain — a small tube that lets infected fluid drain out of the abdomen while the baby is too unstable for a full operation. Some babies stabilize with the drain and avoid laparotomy; others eventually need surgery anyway.

Why Surgical NEC Matters Long-Term

Surgical NEC carries higher mortality and a distinctive set of long-term complications:

Why the line matters legally. A child who survives medical NEC and recovers fully has a different case from a child who survives surgical NEC with short bowel syndrome and lifetime medical needs. Damages calculations — lifetime care costs, lost earning capacity, life-care plans — flow directly from where the NEC fell on the medical-vs-surgical line.

How the Distinction Maps to the Case

For families considering an NEC lawsuit, the medical-vs-surgical distinction matters in several specific ways:

If Your Baby Had Surgical NEC

If your premature baby required surgery for NEC, the case file already contains substantial documentation of the disease severity. The first conversation in a free case review usually focuses on the timeline before the surgery — specifically, whether the deterioration to surgical NEC should have been recognized and treated sooner.

Free case review. No Fees Unless We Recover Money for You.

Sources

Did Your Baby Need NEC Surgery?

Free, confidential case review. Herb Borroto, M.D., J.D., reviews surgical NEC charts with both medical and legal training.

No fees unless we recover compensation for you.

Disclaimer: Informational only, not legal advice. Every case is different. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

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