Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000727 (acute abdomen)
3,084 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Angiomyolipoma is an uncommon benign tumor of the kidney. The tumor is composed of fat, smooth muscle, and blood vessels. The same pathological entity can appear in two clinically different forms, with or without tuberous sclerosis. We present two cases of renal angiomyolipomas with unusual manifestations. One was associated with tuberous sclerosis and both had the presentation of acute abdomen. Case one presented with epilepsy, angiofibroma, subungual fibroma, periventricular calcification, and bilateral renal angiomyolipomas. Tuberous sclerosis is characterized by these findings. Both cases had spontaneous hemorrhage with hypovolemic shock. Massive hemorrhage resulting in shock is uncommon and the incidence has been estimated to be about 10 per cent. In fact, many angiomyolipomas are clinically occult. The size of the tumor correlates well with the presence or absence of symptoms which include microhematuria, flank pain, hypertension and urinary tract infection. Abdominal CT is the preferred modality for diagnosis of angiomyolipoma. The most important finding is the presence of an intrarenal tumor with fat component which is recognized as a relative low density on CT. Our patients were hospitalized under the impression of angiomyolipoma after the CT study. In addition, the CT defined either the size of the tumor or the extension of the hemorrhage. Although many believe that renal angiography is not sufficient by itself to establish the diagnosis of angiomyolipoma, occasionally it is mandatory in the management of the tumor. The management is decided by two factors, the size of tumor and the clinical presentation. The attitude of management should include conservative treatment with regular follow-up, selective arterial embolization, enucleation, and partial or total nephrectomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Unusual presentations of angiomyolipoma]. 179 71

Rectus sheath hematoma is an uncommon but well-described complication of a tussive paroxysm. It is an accumulation of blood within the sheath of the rectus abdominis secondary to disruption of the epigastric vessels or the rectus muscle and is often misdiagnosed as acute abdomen. Increases in the number of elderly patients and the use of therapeutic anticoagulation may increase the prevalence and severity of rectus sheath hematomas encountered in clinical practice. Expanding rectus sheath hematomas are occasionally refractory to conservative treatment and may require hemostatic intervention. Here, we describe the case of an 87-year-old woman who presented with two separate rectus sheath hematomas that were precipitated by a paroxysm of coughing. Repeated computed tomography showed two separate expanding rectus sheath hematomas, which were not accompanied by obvious contrast extravasation on angiography. Empiric left inferior epigastric artery embolization resulted in rapid hemodynamic stabilization, and the hematomas shrank gradually. Early empiric transcatheter arterial embolization may be appropriate for patients who are poor surgical candidates and have enlarging hematomas that are refractory to conservative treatment.
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PMID:Expanding refractory rectus sheath hematoma: a therapeutic dilemma. 2164 56

A 48-year-old man with locally advanced pancreatic cancer underwent combined treatment with gemcitabine and proton radiation therapy. Because of subsequent obstruction of the common bile duct, a metallic biliary stent was placed and he received further gemcitabine chemotherapy. During chemotherapy, he developed an acute abdomen with a sudden-onset of tarry stool and jaundice. Gastroduodenoscopy revealed hemobilia from the biliary metallic stent. Contrast-enhanced abdominal computed tomography revealed the presence of a pseudoaneurysm arising from the right hepatic artery adjacent to the top of the stent. Hemostasis of the right hepatic artery pseudoaneurysm was achieved via transcatheter arterial embolization using cyanoacrylate.
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PMID:[Hemobilia into a metallic biliary stent due to pseudoaneurysm: a case report]. 2430 2