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Query: UMLS:C0000727 (
acute abdomen
)
3,084
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The torsion of spleen on its vascular shank represents an uncommon problem, responsible of acute and chronic pain. The mobile spleen is fixed only through hilus vessels the gastrosplenic ligament. The incidence is unknow, greater in the male with an M:F ratio 6.1 in the first ten years of life, even if an episode of intrauterine torsion has been reported. The diagnosis can be performed with ultrasonography, angiography, scintigraphy and CT scan. There are reported two cases: male of 2.5 years female of 14 years who presented with recurrent pain to the left side, vomit
diarrhoea
and fever. Objectively a palpable mass was present. Ultrasonography and angio-CT scan of abdomen revealed splenomegaly, ptosis of the spleen and malrotation with signs of obstruction of the vessels. The treatment in both cases was splenectomy. The spleen appeared rotated on its shank and increased of volume, deprived of anatomical structures of fixation. The histological report confirmed the haemorrhagic infarction. The excessive mobility of the spleen, from insufficiency or absence of the ligamentous attachments is case of abdominal pain or
acute abdomen
, that can complicate with the infarction of the spleen. Angio-CT scan, in the cases here reported, has shown to greater sensibility in comparison to the ultrasonography. The Authors believe that the video-laparoscopic splenopexy, when the diagnosis is made of "wandering spleen" with painful repeated episodes, can be finalized, to the preservation of organ.
...
PMID:[Uncommon etiology of acute abdomen in pediatric age: the torsion of spleen]. 1584 92
Mesenteric inflammatory veno-occlusive disease (MIVOD) is a relatively recently known and not very often diagnosed form of ischemic bowel disease of low incidence und unknown etiology. We present the case of a patient who after presentation of inconclusive signs of epigastric pain and rectal bleeding suddenly developed right abdominal pain with local peritonism. Suspecting intestinal ischemia or perforated appendicitis we first performed laparoscopy, which showed an inflammable tumor of cecum, ascending colon and appendix with massive adhesions to the abdominal wall. We performed an open right hemicolectomy with primary anastomosis. The patient developed a deep vein thrombosis of the vena tibialis post. and vena saphena parva. After 12 months our patient is free of complaints and recurrence. Investigations carried out showed no evidence of hypercoagulopathy. The presentation of MIVOD can range from chronic inflammatory bowel disease with recurrent abdominal pain in combination with nausea, emesis and bloody
diarrhea
to
acute abdomen
. Therefore diagnostic misinterpretation and mistherapy as well as underdiagnosis is common. Histologic investigation shows a variable inflammatory infiltration of multiple veins of the intestinal wall and the mesentery as well as thrombotic vessel occlusion in different stages without involvement of the arteries. All forms of hypercoagulopathy, parasitic disease, sepsis and malignancy have to be excluded. Therapeutic success can only be achieved with surgical resection of the affected bowel, whereon in general no recurrence will occur.
...
PMID:[Mesenteric inflammatory veno-occlusive disease (MIVOD)--a rare cause of intestinal ischemia]. 1639 91
Clostridium myonecrosis is a rare and deadly infection that progresses very rapidly; thus, prompt diagnosis and treatment is vital. In adults, clostridial myonecrosis used to be a well-known complication of war wounds. Today, it is usually seen in settings of trauma, surgery, malignancy, skin infections/burns, and septic abortions. More recently, cases of nontraumatic or spontaneous clostridial myonecrosis have been reported in both adults and children. Clostridium perfringens and Clostridium septicum are responsible for the majority of the clinically relevant infections. Higher mortality rates are seen when C septicum is the causative agent. Here we present a child who survived a severe case of C septicum myonecrosis involving both abdominal and thoracic cavities. This rare infection has a high mortality rate and might be easily misdiagnosed in children, even by experienced clinicians, because of its nonspecific presentation. We also review all reported pediatric cases of C septicum infection and myonecrosis and discuss the surgical and medical interventions associated with improved survival. We identified a total of 47 cases of C septicum infection; of these, 22 (47%) were cases of C septicum associated with myonecrosis. Several factors, if available, were analyzed for each case: age, gender, infection location, previous diagnoses, presenting signs and symptoms, neutropenia, gross pathology of the colon, antibiotic use, surgical intervention, and final outcome. We found that conditions related with C septicum infection in children can be grouped into 3 major categories: patients with neutrophil dysfunction; patients with associated bowel ischemia; and patients with a history of trauma. Malignancies were found in 49% of the cases, cyclic or congenital neutropenia in 21%, hemolytic-uremic syndrome in 11%, structural bowel ischemia in 4%, and local extremity trauma in 6%. In addition, 6% of the cases had no known underlying disorder. Abdominal symptoms including vomiting,
diarrhea
, blood per rectum, abdominal pain, anorexia, and/or
acute abdomen
, were reported in 85% of the children. Fever was also a common finding. The mainstay of treatment for C septicum infection was parenteral antibiotics and/or surgical intervention. The mortality rate for children with C septicum infection and myonecrosis was 57% and 59%, respectively. Although 82% of all cases received antibiotics, only 43% underwent therapeutic surgical intervention. Several clinical factors were found to be associated with improved survival. Only 35% of the children with gastrointestinal tract involvement survived, compared with 86% of the children without gastrointestinal tract involvement. The survival rates for other conditions ranged from 0% to 50%. One hundred percent survival was reported in patients with no previously diagnosed conditions and those with infections resulting from trauma to the extremities. All survivors received antibiotic treatment, compared with only 68% of the nonsurvivors. Most survivors (84%) underwent therapeutic surgical intervention, compared with only 12% of nonsurvivors. Other treatments were used adjunctively, including hyperbaric oxygen, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, granulocyte transfusions, and intravenous immunoglobulin. C septicum infections in children are often fatal; thus, one needs to have a high index of suspicion in at-risk patients. This review describes who these patients are, their clinical presentation, and the therapeutic strategies associated with improved survival.
...
PMID:Clostridium septicum infections in children: a case report and review of the literature. 1656 92
Clostridium perfiringens may cause myonecrosis (i.e. gas gangrene), acute food poisoning or necrotic enteritis (e.g. enteritis necroticans or Pig Bel). We describe a case of enteritis necroticans in a 33 year old man with acute myeloid leukaemia. He presented with an
acute abdomen
,
diarrhoea
and pancytopaenia and extensive accumulation of gas in the intrahepatic and extrahepatic portal veins. Despite urgent resuscitation he died shortly after arrival in the Intensive Care Unit. Treatment of enteritis necroticans requires urgent surgery to remove dead bowel and in adults intravenous penicillin (1g 2-hourly) and metronidazole (500 mg 8-hourly) or clindamycin (600 mg 6-hourly). While antibiotics may also reduce toxin formation, beta toxoid has not been found to be of benefit in established disease.
...
PMID:Proximal small bowel infarction associated with portal venous gas. 1660 2
Yersinia enteritis may present with alarming gastrointestinal manifestations. The aim of this study was to review the cases of children admitted to a general hospital with a preliminary diagnosis of surgical nature and subsequently proven to be infected by Yersinia enterocolitica. All cases of children aged less than 14 years with stool cultures positive for Y. enterocolitica during the 12-year period January 1993 through December 2004 were analyzed. Y. enterocolitica was isolated from the stools of 71 children with gastrointestinal manifestations; 27 children were treated as outpatients and 44 were hospitalized. Six were admitted to the Pediatric Surgery Department (13.6% of the total hospitalizations and 8.4% of all Y. enterocolitica cases). Four of the Pediatric Surgery patients presented with abdominal pain and right lower quadrant tenderness. The preliminary diagnosis of appendicitis was excluded during hospitalization and none of them underwent appendectomy. The other two children were admitted for vomiting initially attributed to a preceding head injury and for
diarrhea
and a perianal abscess. Two children were given antibiotics and all had an excellent outcome. Y. enterocolitica enteritis manifestations can infrequently mimic appendicitis or other surgical conditions but should remain in the differential diagnosis of children presenting with an
acute abdomen
.
...
PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica infection mimicking surgical conditions. 1677 Jun 4
Polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) is a rare type of childhood vasculitis. We report the case of a 10-year-old boy who was referred to our hospital following an appendicectomy with fever, abdominal pain, vomiting,
diarrhoea
, weight loss, joint pains and skin rash. Shortly after admission, he developed peritonitis, and an emergency laparotomy revealed ischaemia of the jejunum which required partial resection. Histologic examination of the resected bowel showed features consistent with PAN. He was treated with steroids and cyclophosphamide. Nineteen months later, he is asymptomatic and thriving. PAN should be included in the differential diagnosis if a child with constitutional symptoms also has gastrointestinal complaints or develops an
acute abdomen
.
...
PMID:Intestinal ischamemia in a child due to polyarteritis nodosa: a case report. 1691 60
This article contains the 4th part of the Pharmacotherapy Guidelines for the Aged by Family Doctors for Family Doctors. Part 4 is dedicated to fecal incontinence and chronic constipation. The diagnostic categories are divided according to severity and dysfuntion of bowel and pelvic floor, sphincter and neural control. Therapy is also outlined. Importance is given to patient history, in particular the use and abuse of drugs that stimulate peristalsis and promote constipation. Therapy in the elderly is guided by the maxim: use the most conservative therapy possible, where stool training has considerable importance. Drug therapy based on symptoms can only be recommended when non-drug measures continue to fail. In patients with fecal incontinence: 1) opiates (which reduce colonic motility), 2) loperamide (which has the capacity to dilate the rectum) and 3) anion exchangers which have the capacity to prevent cholonic
diarrhea
. In patients with chronic obstipation: 1) trial: stool-forming laxatives (ensure intake of sufficient amount of fluids) 2) trial: laxatives with an osmotic effect and 3) trial: stimulating laxatives (beware abuse, do not use in cases of
acute abdomen
).
...
PMID:Pharmacotherapy guidelines for the aged by family doctors for the use of family doctors - Part C Special Pharmacology. 1935 87
Ischemic colitis is the most common type of intestinal ischemia, and it represents the consequences of acute or, more commonly, chronic blockage of blood flow through arteries that supply the large intestine. Ischemic colitis is manifested through a continuum of injury and considered as an illness of the elderly. The incidence of ischemic colitis has been underestimated, because many mild cases may go unreported. Patients experience abdominal pain, usually, localized to the left side of the abdomen, along with tenderness and bloody
diarrhea
. Severe ischemia may lead to bowel necrosis and perforation, which results in an
acute abdomen
and shock, frequently, being accompanied by lactic acidosis. Although computed tomography may have indicative findings, colonoscopy is the golden standard of diagnosis. Supportive care with intravenous fluids, optimization of hemodynamic status, avoidance of vasoconstrictive drugs, bowel rest, and empiric antibiotics will produce clinical improvement within 1 to 2 days in most patients. The condition resolves completely with conservative treatment, in most cases, but late diagnosis or severe ischemia can be associated with high rates of complications and death. However, when the interruption to the blood supply is more severe or more prolonged, the affected portion of the large intestine may have to be surgically removed. The present paper aims at bringing ischemic colitis up to date, by reviewing the current medical literature and extracting the contemporary data, about its presentation, diagnosis and treatment, which is of benefit to the readership, who may encounter this potentially fatal entity.
...
PMID:Ischemic colitis: surging waves of update. 1947 63
Intussusception is a rare clinical finding in adults. Most cases occur in the distal small bowel or large intestine. We report the case of a 65-year-old woman with known non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who presented with
acute abdomen
and ileus-like symptoms. Abdominal computed tomography suggested ileocecal intussusception. The patient underwent right hemicolectomy and the histopathological workup showed ileal NSCLC metastasis as the lead lesion of intussusception. The classic triad of cramping abdominal pain, bloody
diarrhea
and a palpable tender mass, which is present in the majority of pediatric patients, is only infrequently observed in adults. Thus, symptoms are often nonspecific and the clinical presentation may be inconspicuous. Because of the large proportion of structural anomalies, adult intussusception requires definitive treatment, of which surgical resection is the treatment of choice. In patients with colocolonic or ileocolonic intussusception, malignancy should be considered and therefore en bloc resection rather than reduction is the recommended surgical technique, whereas cases of enteric intussusceptions may be reduced by limited resection of the small intestine.
...
PMID:Ileocecal intussusception caused by lung cancer metastasis. 1962
Acute Fulminant Necrotizing Amoebic Colitis is a rare complication of amoebiasis that is associated with high mortality. Only one to four such cases are seen per year in large hospitals of India, and only few such cases have been reported in the literature. The condition requires early diagnosis and surgical intervention. We recently cared for a patient who presented with
acute abdomen
with history of intermittent abdominal pain and
diarrhea
. Before presenting to our institution he was misdiagnosed as a case of inflammatory bowel disease and had been treated with steroids. On emergency exploration, extensive necrosis and multiple perforations in retroperitoneum involving entire colon were seen. Total colectomy with ileostomy was performed. Postoperative course was marked by septicaemia and multi-organ failure followed by death. This case report emphasizes the importance of early diagnosis and treatment of acute FAC, and associated high mortality.
...
PMID:Acute fulminant necrotizing amoebic colitis: a rare and fatal complication of amoebiasis: a case report. 1991 32
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