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Query: UMLS:C0000727 (acute abdomen)
3,084 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vasculitis in children is uncommon and hardly any information is available from India. We, at PGIMER, Chandigarh, have diagnosed and followed many children with vasculitis of different types though not all, which occur in children. In this article, we have given an overview of the vasculitides that we have encountered along-with a review of relevant literature. We have described 8 children with classical PAN and have highlighted a higher frequency of CNS involvement in our patients. Amongst the 10 BCPAN children, as many as 8 had peripheral gangrene which resulted in auto-amputation in 7. Gangrene of such severity has not been previously reported in this condition. We have also included 30 children with HSP. Gastrointestinal involvement was noted in 86.7% of children and in one of these, it was severe enough to result in hypovolemic shock. Such severe bleeding is very rare. Two of our patients with HSP came late to us after having been operated for an 'acute abdomen' elsewhere. Although renal involvement was seen less frequently than reported in the literature, the severity of involvement was greater (nephrotic range proteinuria in 62% and azotemia in 50%). We have only limited experience of Kawasaki Disease but it appears that children with this disorder are probably not being diagnosed in the acute stage in our country.
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PMID:Vasculitis in children. 1083 7

Ten children (4.6%) among a cohort of 219 with Kawasaki disease (KD) had their onset with severe abdominal complaints. Incomplete KD presentation at the time of acute abdomen was present in nine of 10 patients. Acute abdominal pain and distension, vomiting, hepatomegaly, and jaundice were the most common symptoms at onset. Hematemesis was present in one; toxic shock syndrome requiring care in the intensive care unit occurred in four. Five patients had laparotomy, three had percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage, and one had a gastrointestinal endoscopy. Postoperative diagnosis was gallbladder hydrops with cholestasis in five, paralytic ileus in three, appendicular vasculitis in one, and hemorrhagic duodenitis in one. All patients completely recovered, but 50% developed coronary aneurysms despite early intravenous gammaglobulin treatment. Acute surgical abdomen can be the presenting manifestation of KD. In older children with fever, rash, and acute abdominal pain or hematemesis, KD should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Acute surgical abdomen as presenting manifestation of Kawasaki disease. 1283 7

In cases of Kawasaki's disease (KD) presenting as acute surgical abdomen, rarely has the presence of acute appendicitis been found. We report two cases of histologically confirmed acute appendicitis in the presence of KD and a review of the literature as it pertains to acute abdomen and atypical presentations of KD.
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PMID:Appendicitis as the presenting manifestation of Kawasaki disease. 2431 13

Kawasaki disease is a multisystem inflammatory disease of small- and medium-sized blood vessels with acute and self limiting course. It occurs most frequently in children under five years of age and is characterized by high fever lasting more than five days, conjunctivitis, stomatitis, edema of hands or feet erythema of the palms and soles, epidermic desquamation of the fingers and toes, polymorphic rush and cervical lymphadenopathy. Such symptoms from other organs as cholestatic jaundice, inflammation and hydrops of the gallbladder, pancreatitis, hepatitis and traits of acute abdomen can also be present. The most serious complications of Kawasaki disease are coronary aneurysms. The principal treatment of the disease is intravenous infusion of immunoglobulin and aspirin. Prompt diagnosis with echocardiogram and the treatment with immunoglobulins before 10th day after the first symptoms improve prognosis and diminish life threatening complication such as coronary arteries aneurysms.
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PMID:[Kawasaki disease in children: epidemiology, clinical symptoms, diagnostics and treatment]. 2449 Apr 69

Kawasaki disease is one of the most common systemic vasculitis in children and the most common cause of acquired heart disease in developed countries. Diagnosis relies on clinical findings and there is no specific test. Diagnosis and treatment decisions are very difficult in incomplete or atypical cases and questions inevitably arise during the care of these patients. In children with atypical or incomplete disease, the option in favor of therapy with gamma globulin seems currently to be the most suitable one. A patient with acute abdomen is presented as the initial symptom of Kawasaki disease.
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PMID:[Acute abdomen at onset of incomplete and atypical Kawasaki disease: case report]. 2572 40

Kawasaki disease (KD) is an acute febrile illness of childhood associated with vasculitis of medium-sized arteries especially the coronary arteries. Typical clinical features involving the skin, mucous surfaces, etc., occur sequentially over a few days. We report a rare presentation of KD as a surgical abdomen in a 2-year-old boy. Awareness of this presentation is important as it can otherwise lead to a delay in starting potentially life-saving intervention like intravenous immunoglobulins for cardiac complications kept cryptic by the manifest acute abdomen.
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PMID:Kawasaki Disease Presenting as Acute Intestinal Obstruction. 2869 77