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Query: UMLS:C0000727 (
acute abdomen
)
3,084
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Emphysematous gastritis is a condition involving gastric wall inflammation, radiologic or intraoperative evidence of intramural gas, and systemic toxicity. A recent case of emphysematous
gastritis
in a 57-year-old diabetic man is reported, and 27 cases published since 1889 are reviewed. Predisposing factors include ingestion of corrosive substances (37%) and alcohol abuse (22%). Diagnosis of emphysematous
gastritis
is based on the clinical presentation of an
acute abdomen
with systemic toxicity and on radiographs demonstrating gas bubbles within the stomach wall. For the case reported herein, computed tomography was useful both in establishing the diagnosis and in following the resolution of emphysematous
gastritis
. Organisms most commonly involved were Escherichia coli (six cases), Streptococcus species (six cases), Enterobacter species (five cases), and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (three cases). The mortality was 61% (17 of 28 patients), and morbidity with gastric contractures occurred in 21% of cases (6 of 28). Optimal therapy has not been defined; however, antimicrobial chemotherapy and surgery, when appropriate, may improve survival rates.
...
PMID:Emphysematous gastritis: case report and review. 223 28
Two cases of acute hemorrhagic gastric necrosis are presented. The first patient was a 62 yr old man with a past history of chronic
gastritis
, Parkinson's disease and dementia. The second case was a 25 yr old woman with recent abuse of oral analgesic agents. Both presented with an
acute abdomen
and peritonitis, and underwent urgent gastrectomy for gastric necrosis with perforation. The first patient died, whereas the second recovered. Histology of the gastrectomy specimens showed severe hemorrhagic transmural gastric necrosis with minimal inflammatory changes. Only occasional Gram positive rods were seen in case 1, and microbiological cultures were negative. The etiology of the gastric necrosis in these 2 cases is unclear.
...
PMID:Two cases of idiopathic acute gastric necrosis. 789 46
The authors describe a case of
acute abdomen
operated in emergency for obstruction in a patient with eosinophilic
gastritis
. This is very unusual pathology characterized by eosinophilic infiltration of the gastric antral wall combined with peripheric eosinophilia. This particular case was operated for a small bowel obstruction but in those rare cases, when we can reach a diagnosis with endoscopic biopsy, a prudential attitude becomes inevitable as this pathology is very responsive to medical treatment with corticosteroids.
...
PMID:[Acute abdomen caused by eosinophilic gastritis]. 799 Dec 8
The article presents results of instrumental examinations of 152 patients in detection of causes of the appearance of false
acute abdomen
. Gastroduodenoscopy (90 observations) has established that its appearance is associated with acute gastroduodenitis (in 42% of the patients), acute gastritis (28%), erosive
gastritis
(27.4%), acute gastric ulcer (2.7%). The ultrasonic investigation (26 patients) of patients with pseudoabdominal syndrome is most effective in acute diseases of the kidneys, liver, pancreas. The article also presents data on the role of laparocentesis (25 cases) and laparoscopy (15) in the detection of causes of pseudosurgical pains in the abdomen.
...
PMID:[The role of instrumental study methods in the diagnosis of "acute abdomen"]. 837 48
The purpose of this prospective study was to elucidate the characteristics of adult patients with
acute abdomen
admitted to a Finnish university hospital. A total of 639 patients entered the study. The most common cause of
acute abdomen
was non-specific abdominal pain (NSAP) (33.0%) followed by acute appendicitis (23.3%) and acute biliary disease (8.8%). The male:female ratio was 47:53 in the whole study population, but there were differences in the age and sex distributions when studied by diagnosis. NSAP was mainly presented in young women, but also in patients over 75 years of age. Acute appendicitis was most frequently found in young men, and biliary disease was most common in elderly women. A male predominance was noted in cases of alcoholic pancreatitis and
gastritis
, renal stones and peptic ulcer. Young women and elderly patients were slightly over-represented in the study population when compared with the whole population residing within the study area. 43% of the patients were operated on, and surgery was most common in patients aged 55-64 years and 15-24 years. Altogether 15% of the patients were discharged without hospitalisation. Twelve patients (1.9%) died of various causes, the most common of which was malignancy (four patients). In conclusion, a considerably large proportion (one third) of cases with
acute abdomen
remained without any specific explanation. Further, age and gender seem to be important factors when the most probable cause of
acute abdomen
is to be considered. Operative treatment is necessary in almost half of cases, and mortality for
acute abdomen
is low.
...
PMID:Acute abdominal pain in adults. 873 26
Emphysematous gastritis is a condition characterized by gas within the wall of the stomach and associated systemic toxicity. We report a case of emphysematous
gastritis
in a 43-year-old diabetic patient receiving hemodialysis and review 41 cases published since 1889. The most common predisposing factors included ingestion of corrosive substances, alcohol abuse, abdominal surgery, diabetes, and immunosuppression. Diagnosis is based on clinical presentation of
acute abdomen
with associated features of systemic toxicity. The most commonly involved organisms were streptococci (nine cases), Escherichia coli (nine cases), Enterobacter species (six cases), Clostridium welchii (four cases), and Staphylococcus aureus (four cases). Computed tomography (CT) is the diagnostic procedure of choice. The mortality rate was 61% (25 of 41 patients). Gastric contractures after recovery were noted in 10% (4 of 41 patients). Antimicrobial therapy with antibiotics covering gram-negative organisms and anaerobes, and surgery in appropriate cases may enhance survival.
...
PMID:Emphysematous gastritis in a hemodialysis patient. 1260 25
We report a case of gastric perforation by Anisakis sp. with consequent localization of the larva in the spleen. An 86-year-old white woman was admitted to our surgical department with a diagnosis of
acute abdomen
. She had a history of abdominal pain, and her laboratory data showed leukocytosis. In the plain abdominal radiograph, pneumoperitoneum was evident; a computed tomography (CT) scan of the abdomen confirmed the presence of extraluminal air. Anamnesis disclosed the ingestion of raw fish during the week preceding her illness. The patient was underwent emergency laparotomy. A small gastric perforation and a nodular area at the superior pole of the spleen were found. Surgical treatment was performed successfully and consisted of excision of the gastric lesion and splenectomy. The histological diagnosis revealed the presence of
gastritis
with an ulcer, and in the splenic tissue, some necrotic foci containing cross-sectioned degenerated worms compatible with Anisakis larva.
...
PMID:Splenic anisakiasis resulting from a gastric perforation: an unusual occurrence. 1458 65
We report a case of phlegmonous
gastritis
associated with Kaposi sarcoma in a 37-year-old, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive man who presented with an
acute abdomen
. Computed tomographic scan revealed free fluid in the abdominal cavity and a thickened gastric wall. A partial gastrectomy was performed. The resected portion of stomach had a hemorrhagic, necrotic thickened wall and showed extensive, acute suppurative inflammation, especially in the submucosa, with focal transmural involvement. Beneath an area of healing ulceration, a focus of Kaposi sarcoma was present. Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus was grown from peritoneal fluid, and treatment with numerous antibiotics was initiated. After a difficult postoperative course that responded to 8 weeks of antibiotic therapy, the patient was medically stable and discharged from the hospital on antiretroviral therapy for HIV. Phlegmonous gastritis is a rare and rapidly progressive bacterial infection of the gastric wall. Kaposi sarcoma is one of the most common malignancies in HIV-positive patients, and gastric involvement is relatively common in those patients with systemic Kaposi sarcoma. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of phlegmonous
gastritis
associated with Kaposi sarcoma, and it represents a rare survival following surgical and antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Phlegmonous gastritis associated with Kaposi sarcoma: a case report and review of the literature. 1521 17
Emphysematous gastritis is a rare form of phlegmonous
gastritis
caused by invasion of the stomach wall by gas-forming bacteria. This clinical entity was first described by Fraenkel in 1889. The authors report the case of a 58-year-old patient with end-stage renal failure under treatment with hemodialysis for the past year. He was admitted on account of pain in the lower abdomen. During the diagnostic procedure, emphysematous
gastritis
and acute cholecystitis were confirmed. An
acute abdomen
developed and an emergency laparotomy was performed. During the procedure, the necrotic gallbladder was removed. The patient died on the following day due to multiorgan failure and septic shock. According to the literature, emphysematous
gastritis
is generally a fatal disease. Air in the wall of the stomach is a rare finding with a broad differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Emphysematous gastritis -- case report and review of the literature. 1531 26
Enterocolic lymphocytic phlebitis (ELP) is a rare cause of gastrointestinal ischemia. Unlike most vasculitic diseases affecting the gastrointestinal tract, ELP involves only the mural and mesenteric veins, which are surrounded by a lymphocytic and sometimes granulomatous infiltrate. The mesenteric arterial system and the systemic vasculature are characteristically spared. Most patients with ELP present with an
acute abdomen
that resolves following surgical resection of the involved bowel. ELP has been reported to involve the small bowel, colon, or both, but involvement of the upper gastrointestinal tract has not been previously described. Here we report a case of lymphocytic phlebitis that affected only the stomach and duodenum. The patient, a 68-year-old man, had a nonhealing gastric antral ulcer and underwent hemigastrectomy with vagotomy and Billroth II reconstruction. Both the resected stomach and duodenum showed characteristic lymphocytic and granulomatous infiltrates that involved the submucosal and mural veins, with associated obliteration of vascular lumina; the adjacent arteries were completely spared. The patient developed late postoperative complications including bile reflux
gastritis
and erosive esophagitis, but he had no recurrence of gastrointestinal ulceration or ischemia over a 2-year follow-up. We hypothesize that there may be more cases of upper gastrointestinal ELP than are diagnosed as such, in part because the diagnosis can be made only on surgical resections specimens.
...
PMID:Chronic antral ulcer associated with gastroduodenal lymphocytic phlebitis. 1557 89
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