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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0000727 (
acute abdomen
)
3,084
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 73 year old woman presenting with an
acute abdomen
was diagnosed as having phlegmonous enteritis after microscopic examination revealed the characteristic finding of a diffuse suppurative inflammation limited to the submucosa in the resected ileal segment. Culture of
Klebsiella
pneumoniae, and the microscopic demonstration of gram positive cocci and gram negative rods confirmed the bacterial etiology of this disease. There was no evidence of mucosal injury in this patient, but the possible role of ischemia secondary to atherosclerotic vascular disease cannot be assessed. Because of the associated high morbidity and mortality, phlegmonous enteritis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of
acute abdomen
.
...
PMID:[Phlegmonous enteritis--a rare cause of acute abdomen]. 194 74
A 68-yr-old woman who developed an
acute abdomen
with clinical and radiological evidence of pneumoperitoneum is is described. At surgery, multiple left lobe hepatic abscesses were identified. Perforation of one abscess was apparent. Bacteriological studies revealed Streptococcus faecalis and gas-producing
Klebsiella
pneumoniae from the abscess cavities. Spontaneous pneumoperitoneum secondary to a ruptured hepatic abscess has to our knowledge never been reported.
...
PMID:Ruptured hepatic abscess: a rare cause of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum. 713 43
Acute appendicitis is a common cause of
acute abdomen
requiring an emergency appendicectomy. Complications such as perforation and peritoneal contamination leading to peritonitis can result from delay in presentation and an emergency operation. This study prospectively recruited 101 patients diagnosed with acute appendicitis to correlate the bacterial flora with the severity of appendicitis. The results show that 90 patients had acutely inflamed or gangrenous appendicitis and 11 had perforated appendicitis. The ages ranged from 6 to 49 years with a median of 20 years. There were 59 females and 42 males. The commonest isolates were aerobic bacteria such as Escherichia coli, Group D streptococci and
Klebsiella
pneumoniae. Mixed infection with anaerobes such as Bacteroides fragilis was seen only in perforated appendicitis. The best choices of antibiotic were a fluoroquinolone, cephalosporin and aminoglycoside for aerobic organisms and metronidazole for anaerobes.
...
PMID:The bacterial flora of acute appendicitis at the Port Moresby General Hospital in Papua New Guinea. 2533 70