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Query: UMLS:C0000727 (
acute abdomen
)
3,084
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Forty-seven proved cases of
intestinal tuberculosis
admitted to the surgical ward of MKCG Medical College, Berhampur from 1985 to 1987 were subjected to laparotomy. The common pathology found were tubercles over the peritoneum, multiple strictures of intestine, ileocaecal mass, perforation of the intestines, bands and adhesions and mesenteric node involvement. The patients with
acute abdomen
were operated in emergency and rest as an elective procedure. Conservative surgeries like stricturoplasty, local intestinal resection, perforation closure, by-pass procedures and local ileocaecal resection were done in most of the cases and only in 2 cases right hemicolectomy was done. Biopsy was taken from the viscera, peritoneum and mesenteric nodes. Postoperative mortality was 6.4%, mostly due to toxaemia and fluid and electrolyte imbalance. Postoperative complications in most of the cases were wound infection. All were given a short course of antituberculosis regimen containing INH, rifampicin and ethambutol. Patients were followed up to one year and definite improvement was noted.
...
PMID:Conservative surgical management of intestinal tuberculosis. 223 Jan 58
Eight cases of abdominal tuberculosis from the Department of Medicine, Singapore General Hospital are reported to illustrate the varied clinical manifestations of the disease. Presentation ranged from asymptomatic hepatomegaly to
acute abdomen
(intestinal obstruction/perforation). Chronic non-specific symptomatology (fever, weight loss, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, jaundice) was commonest. There were three patients with hepatic tuberculosis, two with tuberculous mesenteric lymphadenitis and three with
intestinal tuberculosis
, two of whom had concomitant tuberculous peritonitis. Only three patients had coexisting pulmonary tuberculosis. The diagnosis was unsuspected at presentation in four patients. Initial provisional diagnoses included typhoid, abdominal lymphoma, hepatic malignancy, chronic hepatitis and iatrogenic gut perforation. All patients responded totally to conventional antituberculous therapy.
...
PMID:The varied manifestations of abdominal tuberculosis. 343 16
Primary
intestinal tuberculosis
is unusual in European and North American countries today. Its diagnosis is often surprising and differentiation from inflammatory bowel diseases is difficult. The authors present a rare case of severe stercoral peritonitis caused by multiple intestinal perforations in a patient with primary ileocecal tuberculosis. Initial clinical and laboratory investigations led to the suspicion of inflammatory bowel disease. The subsequent diagnostic workup included colonoscopic examination of the cecal and terminal region of the ileum with multiple biopsies. After the pathologist had assessed the specimen as indicating Crohn's disease, appropriate therapy was initiated. Several days later, however, the patient was readmitted to a surgical intensive care unit with clinical signs of peritonitis and immediately operated on. The final diagnosis from a resection specimen confirmed the diagnosis of primary
intestinal tuberculosis
. The follow-up was complicated by a subhepatic abscess formation with the necessity for surgical drainage. The patient's recovery was uneventful, she underwent intensive antituberculotic therapy and is asymptomatic at present. Surgeons caring for patients with
acute abdomen
should be aware of tuberculous perforation peritonitis even in non-risk groups of patients.
...
PMID:Perforation peritonitis in primary intestinal tuberculosis. 1179 99
A 27-year-old man was admitted to our hospital in September 18, 2000, complaining of fever, cough, appetite loss and body weight loss. He was diagnosed as advanced lung tuberculosis, because of chest X-ray findings and positive acid-fast bacilli in his sputum. He was administrated rifampicin (RFP), isoniazid (INH) and ethambutol (EB). Two days after starting treatment he complained of abdominal pain and the signs of perforating peritonitis. Emergency laparotomy was performed and we observed multiple ulcers and a perforation of ileum. We resected a part of distal ileum and ascending colon and made ileostomy. Histopathologic examination of resected ileum and colon showed multiple ulcers and epithelioid cell granulomas with caseous necrosis. Many acid bacilli were identified from the lesion by specially stained tissue sections. He was administrated streptomycin and INH by injection post-operatively while oral administration was impossible. Six days after the first operation, we found the signs of perforation in another part of the ileum. So we were obliged to perform second laparotomy and resect the part involved. Five days after the second operation, he was able to take RFP, INH, and levofloxacin per oral route. On February 8, 2001 we performed ileocolonal reconstruction with side to side anastomosis and closed ileostomy at the third laparotomy. He had continued chemotherapy and went back to Korea in April 7, 2001. Although
intestinal tuberculosis
has sharply declined in Japan thanks to development of effective antituberculous drugs, we should keep in mind that it could be a possible cause of the
acute abdomen
.
...
PMID:[A case of perforative peritonitis complicated with lung and intestinal severe tuberculosis]. 1223 48
The authors are reviewing on a lot of 2844 cases between 1996 and 2000 the difficult problems of differential diagnosis between acute surgical abdomen in children and
intestinal tuberculosis
, abdominal tumors and inflammatory diseases such as acute osteomielitis. They are presenting 13 particular cases in which the
acute abdomen
diagnosis was difficult or even omitted.
...
PMID:[Errors and difficulties in the diagnosis and management of acute and chronic abdomen in children]. 1273 Dec 56
An 18-year-old long-term Norwegian resident of Somali origin was submitted to hospital with bloody diarrhoea, fever, weight loss and abdominal pain. On initial colonoscopy, colitis with segmental appearance was seen. Apart from a single polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from gastric aspirate staining, PCR and culture for acid-fast bacilli revealed negative results from the multiple samples taken including sputum, gastric fluid, stool, urine and intestinal mucosa. On physical examination and CT scan, there was no evidence of ascites, lymph node enlargement or pathologic pulmonary findings. Although the diagnosis was uncertain, tuberculostatic therapy was initiated. As the conformational testing of the PCR and the microbiological work-up remained negative and the patient's condition did not improve, tuberculostatic treatment was stopped and Crohn's disease was stated as the most likely diagnosis. Although the patient improved clinically under therapy with prednisolone, newly appearing fistulas deriving from the ascending colon were noted on follow-up. Thus tuberculostatic treatment was restarted. However, signs of an
acute abdomen
appeared and laparotomy was performed, thereby revealing a peritoneal spread of nodules. Resection of the ileum and ascending colon was performed. Diagnosis of
intestinal tuberculosis
with peritoneal spread was made by histology from resected bowel specimens showing caseating granulomas and a positive PCR result. The patient's condition improved after resection of the highly inflamed bowel segments and tuberculostatic therapy. Our case report shows the difficulty of proving
intestinal tuberculosis
by microbiological testing, macroscopic features on colonoscopy, histology, imaging such as CT scan and by empirical therapy. Therefore, in cases of colonic inflammation, where
intestinal tuberculosis
is an important differential diagnosis, a more aggressive diagnostic approach such as explorative laparoscopy should be considered.
...
PMID:Pitfalls in the diagnosis of intestinal tuberculosis: a case report. 1693 27