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

Infection, hemorrhage and adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are pulmonary complications occurring after remission induction therapy for acute leukemia. The aim of this study was to analyze the incidence of these causes by serial roentgenogram, clinical, microbiological and laboratory tests in 21 patients (pts) with relapsed acute leukemia (18 X myeloid, 3 X lymphoblastic), an AML-pt (acute myeloid leukemia) suffering from secondary leukemia, and three pts with primary refractory leukemia following treatment with intermediate (IM) and high-dose cytosine arabinoside (HD-Ara C), in combination with amsacrine (AMSA)(n = 19), etoposide (VP 16) (n = 5) or Mitoxantrone (n = 1). Eleven out of 25 pts developed pulmonary complications, one of them with massive hemoptysis and roentgenographic signs of pulmonary bleeding, one suffering from protracted shock after a tumor lysis syndrome, two pts showing symptoms of a cardiogenic pulmonary edema complicating severe Candida pneumonia in one case and legionnaires' disease in the other. Seven of the eleven pts had a non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema with respiratory failure 1-14 days after cessation of induction or consolidation therapy. In six of the seven, there were no signs of cardiogenic, infectious or metabolic reasons, including fluid overload, for the pulmonary edema, one had as a contributing factor a Candida infection of the lung. Three of the seven patients recovered, four died (two following IM and two after HD-Ara C). Other adverse side effects, clearly attributable to HD-Ara C, included delirious state (n = 3), generalized erythema (n = 3), acute pancreatitis (n = 2), acute abdomen (n = 1) and conjunctivitis in almost all patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema complicating intermediate and high-dose Ara C treatment for relapsed acute leukemia. 336 72

We revised 7988 laparoscopies over twenty years. Three hundred and ninety three were urgent laparoscopies: 325 patients with acute spontaneous abdomen and 68 acute traumatic abdomen. Emergency laparoscopy is made in patients with, both spontaneous and traumatic acute abdomen, when diagnosis is not made in 8 hours with the usual clinical and imaging methods. Acute diffuse peritonitis was the commonest finding in the first group (21%) and splenic rupture in the traumatic group (34%). There were two severe complications (0.5%): pulmonary oedema in a patient with myocardial disease and a respiratory failure in a old patient, which were resolved. We had two deaths related to laparoscopic diagnosis: massive mesenteric thrombosis and fecal peritonitis. There are few contraindications and tolerance is very good. This study shows a sensitivity of 98%, a specificity of 90%, a predictive positive value greater than 98% and a negative predictive value of 100%. In summary, the present study demonstrates that emergency laparoscopy is a effective diagnostic method in acute abdominal pain of uncertain aetiology.
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PMID:[Emergency laparoscopy. A 20-year experience]. 779 38

Seven cases of abdominal complications necessitated laparotomies within 30 days after open heart surgery are presented. They consist of five cases of mesenteric infarction, one acalculous cholecystitis and one hemorrhagic ulcer of the rectum. The incidence is 0.9 percent at our institute. They also had a very complex course after their cardiac surgery such as cardiogenic shock, respiratory failure and renal failure prior to the development of their acute surgical abdomen. It is proposed that the cause of acute abdomen is attributed basically to the low cardiac output state. Surgery must be performed without delay because unnecessary passage of time is accompanied by unacceptable mortality rate.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal complication after open cardiac operation]. 825 17

There are three clinical presentations of anthrax in humans: cutaneous (>95% of cases), orogastric and inhalational. The infectious form, the spore, enters the body and is thought to germinate within macrophages either at the site of inoculation (cutaneous or orogastric) or in the regional lymph node (inhalational). The bacillus then synthesizes its antiphagocytic capsule and the lethal and oedema toxins which interfere with the non-specific host defences leading to the characteristic locally destructive lesion and spread by lymphatics to the systemic circulation and other organs. The cutaneous form begins as a papule which progresses over several days to a vesicle and then ulcerates. There is often oedema, sometimes massive, probably due to the oedema toxin that surrounds the lesions which then develop a characteristic black eschar. The patient may be febrile with mild to severe systemic symptoms of malaise, headache and toxicity. Oropharyngeal anthrax presents with severe sore throat or an ulcer in the oropharyngeal cavity associated with neck swelling, fever, toxicity and dysphagia. Gastrointestinal anthrax begins with anorexia, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain which may be similar to an acute abdomen. There may be diarrhoea and ascites, both of which may be haemorrhagic. Inhalational anthrax begins with non-specific symptoms of malaise, fever, myalgia and non-productive cough. After a period of 2-3 days, this is followed by a sudden onset of severe respiratory distress associated with diaphoresis, cyanosis and increased chest pain. There may be a widened mediastinum and pleural effusions on chest X-ray. Death follows in 24-36 h from respiratory failure, sepsis and shock. The diagnosis of anthrax is easy if it is considered. The organism is readily observed by Gram or Wright stain in local lesions or blood smear and can be easily cultured from the blood and other body fluids. However, because of its rarity, it is not often included in the differential diagnosis and in inhalational disease the diagnosis is rarely made until the patient is moribund. More rapid diagnostic tests are under development. Penicillin, combined with supportive care, remains the mainstay of treatment, although the organism is susceptible in vitro to many antibiotics. In recent years, there have been significant advances in our knowledge of the organism and its toxins and it is anticipated that similar progress will be made in the future in developing more rapid diagnostic tests and new modalities of treatment.
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PMID:Clinical aspects, diagnosis and treatment of anthrax 1047 74

Actinomycosis is subacute or chronic disease manifested by a defined granulomatous inflammation with the development of infiltrates, abscesses and fistulae. A 35-year-old female patient was admitted and operated at the Second Surgical Clinic because of symptoms of diffuse peritonitis. Laparotomy revealed a duplicit tumour of the small intestine, an abscess of the abdominal wall in the left mesogastrium and pyoovarium bilaterale. 70 cm of the small intestine were resected, incision of the abscess and bilateral adnexotomy were performed. Histological examination revealed a suppurative, partly fibroproductive inflammation with an actinomycotic etiopathology. After antibiotic treatment the patient was discharged home, the gynaecologist removed an intrauterine device. Three months after the first operation the patient in a serious septic condition was readmitted to the clinic with signs of diffuse peritonitis. A double perforation of the small intestine was found and an end-to-end anastomosis was made after resection of the small intestine. The postoperative course was complicated by respiratory failure and failure of the circulation associated with septic shock and subsequent death. In the conclusion the authors emphasize the problem of preoperative diagnosis of the abdominal form of actinomycosis, its possible development in relation to intrauterine contraceptive devices and its clinical manifestation as acute abdomen.
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PMID:[Actinomycosis of the small intestine--an unusual cause of acute abdomen]. 1179 61

This is a detailed histological autopsy study of 47 cases of macroscopically recognisable flat intraendometrial haemorrhage into the atrophic lining of the uterine cavity. The average age of the studied women was 71 years. The majority of the deceased patients (61%) had suffered from various cardiovascular diseases or acute abdomen; the rest had disseminated carcinoma, chronic lung, kidney or liver diseases. The most common cause of death was cardiovascular failure (68%), followed by respiratory failure, cerebrovascular accident and renal or liver failure. We have observed serious vascular changes in other organs in 22 cases (46%), many of these affected the gastrointestinal tract. The histological examination has always showed congestion of the endometrium and myometrium. In 38 cases there was also marked haemorrhage into the endometrial stroma which occasionally extended into the myometrium. The intensity of the bleeding resembled a haemorrhagic infarction in several instances. The myometrial arteries exhibited a variable degree of atherosclerosis with narrowing of their lumen. In our opinion, apoplexia uteri is caused by the state of permanent hypoperfusion leading to passive hyperaemia, and it is related to the degree of the arterial stenosis.
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PMID:[Apoplexia uteri--a postmenopausal bleeding into atrophic endometrium during terminal stress]. 1564 51

Thrombotic microangiopathy occurs in 5-10% of patients with mucin-producing disseminated adenocarcinoma. A 28-year-old woman complained of fatigue, bone pain, and weight loss. There were pallor, icterus, and tenderness in the bones on physical examination. Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, leukoerythroblastic picture, thrombocytopenia, and normal coagulation tests were detected. Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) was diagnosed and therapeutic plasma exchange was performed on the patient. On day 5 a laparotomy had to be performed because of acute abdomen due to the rupture of a corpus hemorrhagicum follicle of an ovary. Signet ring cell adenocarcinoma stained with cytokeratin 7 and mucicarmine was seen on ovaries and bone marrow, after the pathological examination. The primary site of tumor could not be investigated, because of the patient's refusal. Although chemotherapy including cis-platinum, infusional 5-fluorouracil, and calcium leucovorin were administered in two courses, she died from respiratory failure. In conclusion, malignancy and bone marrow involvement should be considered when associated with leukoerythroblastic picture and TTP.
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PMID:Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura as the first manifestation of metastatic adenocarcinoma in a young woman. 1992 23

We are describing a case of an 18-year-old male patient with cytomegalovirus (CMV) associated guillain-barre syndrome (GBS) who presented with an acute onset of generalized weakness and numbness in the extremities, dysphagia, and facial diplegia, followed by respiratory failure, which led to mechanical ventilation. He had positive immunoglobulin G and immunoglobulin M antibodies against CMV, and CMV polymerase chain reaction was positive with <2000 copies of deoxyribonucleic acid. Human immunodeficiency virus test was negative. He received a course of ganciclovir, intravenous immunoglobulin, and plasmapheresis. After improving from acute episode, patient was transferred to a rehabilitation facility for physical and occupational therapy. At the rehabilitation facility, he exhibited signs of acute abdomen with pain in the left upper quadrant secondary to peritonitis from dislodged gastrostomy tube and underwent exploratory laparotomy. During the hospital course he was found to have splenic infarct and colitis on the computed tomography of abdomen. This case showed an immunocompetent young patient with multisystem complications including guillain-barre syndrome (GBS), splenic infarct, hepatitis, and colitis due to CMV.
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PMID:A young patient with multisystem complications after cytomegalovirus infection. 2474 Dec 54

Botulism is an important public health problem in Argentina. It is a potentially fatal disease, and its diagnosis may be difficult. There are rare presentation forms of the disease, such as acute abdomen. We present a 4-month baby with a 3-day constipation condition, associated with weakness and abnormal eating attitude in the last 12 hours. The baby presented preserved muscle tone, with no changes in sucking or deglutition according to the mother's observations. Altered sensorium and acute abdomen were found; the patient was entered into the operating room with presumptive diagnosis of intussusception, which was confirmed by pneumatic desinvagination. During hospitalization, the patient did not make good progress and presented weak cry, progressive hypotonia and respiratory failure requiring intensive care. Clostridium botulinum was isolated from the stool sample and botulinum toxin type A was isolated from serum. The patient was treated with equine botulinum toxin. Twenty five days after admission, he was totally recovered.
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PMID:[Intussusception in infant with diagnostic botulism: A case report]. 2629 64

Congenital diaphragmatic hernias constitute an infrequent but potentially serious presentation of bowel obstruction in the adult patient. Herein, we present a rare case of an adult patient with strangulation of colon within a Morgagni's hernia where timely recognition and intervention were life-saving. An 18-year-old female presented with an acute abdomen, respiratory failure, and shock secondary to a strangulated, previously undiagnosed Morgagni hernia requiring emergency laparotomy, reduction of hernia contents and resection of non-viable colon. The patient underwent repair of the hernia with restoration of bowel continuity and reconstruction of her abdominal wall in sequential fashion. Although congenital diaphragmatic hernias have been previously described in the adult population, there are few if any reports of such pathology presenting in such an acute, life-threatening fashion. This case highlights the importance of a high index of suspicion, early recognition, and timely surgical intervention for this rare, potentially fatal condition.
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PMID:Acute presentation of congenital diaphragmatic hernia requiring damage control laparotomy in an adult patient. 2877 39


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