Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0000727 (
acute abdomen
)
3,084
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three children presented as acute surgical emergencies due to undiagnosed diabetes mellitus. Where
diabetic ketoacidosis
mimicks the
acute abdomen
three clinical features are important in reaching the right diagnosis-namely, a history of polydipsia, polyuria, and anorexia preceding the abdominal pain, the deep sighing and rapid respirations, and severe dehydration.
...
PMID:Acute diabetic abdomen in childhood. 5 84
Three patients, two women aged 21 and 67 and a man aged 43 years, presented at the emergency department with
diabetic ketoacidosis
and abdominal symptoms mimicking an acute abdominal condition. In two of them laparotomy was performed which proved to be negative. Abdominal symptoms resolved after correction of metabolic, fluid and electrolyte disturbances. Symptoms indicating a possible diagnosis of
acute abdomen
have to be regarded as being compatible with
diabetic ketoacidosis
per se. However, a potential acute abdominal problem prompting surgical intervention should not be overlooked; it may have been the precipitating factor for
diabetic ketoacidosis
.
...
PMID:[Diabetic ketoacidosis presenting as acute abdomen]. 1066 39
Some situations in which endocrinological diseases and their complications (
diabetic ketoacidosis
, acute adrenal failure, pheochromocytoma, thyrotoxicosis, thyrotoxic crisis, hyperparathyroidism crisis) give the picture of false
acute abdomen
are analyzed.
...
PMID:[False acute abdomen in clinical practice]. 1268 29
The acute abdominal diseases in diabetic patients have some typical clinical features, which may be responsible for delated or even erroneous diagnosis. Severe anatomo-pathological forms of these diseases may advance, despite a rather discreet clinical evidence. The authors analyze a series of 132 diabetic patients with
acute abdomen
, operated between 1996 and 2001 in Surgical Clinic "I. Juvara", from Clinical Hospital "Dr. I. Cantacuzino"-Bucharest. The difficulties and also the inadvertences of diagnosis are detailed. Finally, a set of indices is presented, in order to help the differential diagnosis between
acute abdomen
and abdominal signs of the
diabetic ketoacidosis
.
...
PMID:[Acute abdomen in diabetic patients --diagnostical questions]. 1499 32
Ketoacidosis is a frequent mode of revelation of diabetes of the child. Signs of diabetes are generally unperceived or are badly interpreted by the family entourage. We report a case of
diabetic ketoacidosis
in an eight-year-old child without particular medical history. The context of discovery was an
acute abdomen
by gastric dilatation in a severe context of dehydration. Evolution was quickly favourable after medical treatment with disappearance of acute abdominal signs (clinical and radiological). This observation enables us to recall, by the light of a review of the literature, that
diabetic ketoacidosis
can be revealed by pseudo-surgical
acute abdomen
and treatment is purely medical.
...
PMID:[Diabetic ketoacidosis of the child revealed by a pseudo-surgical acute abdomen. A case report]. 1763 87
This study describes the profile of 100 cases of
diabetic ketoacidosis
(
DKA
) at a teaching hospital in 1 Benghazi, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya.
DKA
was more frequent in young women with type 1 diabetes and mostly due to preventable causes, e.g., disrupted insulin treatment and/or infection.
DKA
also occurred in type 2 diabetics, with a higher mortality rate, as they were older patients with co-morbidity. Polyurea, fatigue, abdominal pain and vomiting were the most common clinical features, while coma was rarer. A high number of cases were first presentations of type 1 diabetes; hence this diagnosis should be considered in all patients with
acute abdomen
or decreased level of consciousness. The reasons for high mortality rate in this study (10%) were multifactorial.
...
PMID:Profile of diabetic ketoacidosis at a teaching hospital in Benghazi, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. 2079 43
Acute abdomen
can be defined as a medical emergency in which there is sudden and severe pain in abdomen with accompanying signs and symptoms that focus on an abdominal involvement. It accounts for about 8 % of all children attending the emergency department. The goal of emergency management is to identify and treat any life-threatening medical or surgical disease condition and relief from pain. In mild cases often the cause is gastritis or gastroenteritis, colic, constipation, pharyngo-tonsilitis, viral syndromes or acute febrile illnesses. The common surgical causes are malrotation and Volvulus (in early infancy), intussusception, acute appendicitis, and typhoid and ischemic enteritis with perforation. Lower lobe pneumonia,
diabetic ketoacidosis
and acute porphyria should be considered in patients with moderate-severe pain with little localizing findings in abdomen. The approach to management in ED should include, in order of priority, a rapid cardiopulmonary assessment to ensure hemodynamic stability, focused history and examination, surgical consult and radiologic examination to exclude life threatening surgical conditions, pain relief and specific diagnosis. In a sick patient the initial steps include rapid IV access and normal saline 20 ml/kg (in the presence of shock/hypovolemia), adequate analgesia, nothing per oral/IV fluids, Ryle's tube aspiration and surgical consultation. An ultrasound abdomen is the first investigation in almost all cases with moderate and severe pain with localizing abdominal findings. In patients with significant abdominal trauma or features of pancreatitis, a Contrast enhanced computerized tomography (CECT) abdomen will be a better initial modality. Continuous monitoring and repeated physical examinations should be done in all cases. Specific management varies according to the specific etiology.
...
PMID:Emergency management of acute abdomen in children. 2345 44
Acute pancreatitis(AP) is one of the common causes of
acute abdomen
and known to be associated with high morbidity and mortality in severe cases. Though most common causes of AP are cholelithiasis and alcoholism, it has also been reported in association with
diabetic ketoacidosis
(
DKA
). Triad of AP, hypertriglyceridaemia (HTG) and
DKA
is rare co-association and here the causal factor of AP is still not fully established. We report a case of AP in a
DKA
patient with recent diagnosis of hyperlipidaemia and diabetes. Usually AP has been associated with severe HTG; interestingly, our patient showed only moderate raise in triglycerides but still suffered AP during
DKA
. Hence, it raises question about the real culprit in this enigmatic triad.
...
PMID:An enigmatic triad of acute pancreatitis, diabetic ketoacidosis and hypertriglyceridaemia: who is the culprit? 3129 32