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

The percentage of neutrophils in a peritoneal cell sample (PNP), obtained at operation, was measured in 250 patients who underwent urgent laparotomy because 'the surgical acute abdomen' (SAA) was suspected. The PNP was substantially higher in patients with confirmed SAA than in others and is potentially a very sensitive and very specific test of SAA. If the PNP was available as a diagnostic test for patients with acute abdominal pain, there might be a significant reduction in unnecessary and delayed laparotomies.
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PMID:Peritoneal neutrophilia: a potential indicator of the surgical acute abdomen. 659 77

During a twelve-month period, 416 children with acute abdominal pain required emergency admission to Southampton General Hospital; 46% had operations. Appendicitis was the commonest organic cause of acute abdominal pain identified (31%). Constipation (9%) can present as acute abdominal pain simulating appendicitis. All children should have a urine sample examined microscopically and the finding of significant pyuria is suggestive, but not diagnostic, of a urinary tract infection (7%). Mesenteric adenitis, which can only be diagnosed with certainty at laparotomy, was less common (4%). Despite careful clinical assessment and follow up, 45% of children in this series remained undiagnosed. Sedation but not analgesia may assist in the diagnosis of the acute abdomen in children.
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PMID:Acute abdominal pain in children. 724 73

The diagnostic and therapeutic influence of laparoscopy has been studied in 255 patients presenting with nontraumatic acute abdominal pain. Laparoscopy provided a correct diagnosis in 93% (236 of 255) of the cases, the others requiring a laparotomy. An erroneous preoperative diagnosis was corrected by laparoscopy in 50 patients (20%), which called for a change of treatment in 25 patients (10%). Seventy-three percent (186 of 255) of acute abdominal conditions were treated exclusively by laparoscopy, 23% (58 of 255) by conventional surgery, and 4% (11 of 255) by laparoscopically assisted surgery. Mortality was 2% (5 of 247) and morbidity 11% (28 of 247). We conclude that laparoscopy is a valuable tool for the general surgeon facing a patient with an acute abdomen.
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PMID:Laparoscopy for management of nontraumatic acute abdomen. 763 93

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

Acute appendicitis is the most common cause of acute abdomen requiring surgical intervention. The clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis is not always easy due to variable symptomatology, particularly at the onset. The contributions of history-taking and physical examination in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis was studied in connection with the Research Committee of the World Organization of Gastroenterology (OMGE) survey of acute abdominal pain. Especially the suitability of diagnostic parameters in the construction of an expert system for automatic decision making was studied. The results clearly show that it is possible to construct an expert system for automatic decision making in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis.
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PMID:Parameters for a knowledge base for acute appendicitis. 805 50

Acute appendicitis is believed to be one of the commonest causes of the acute abdomen in tropical Africa. Negative appendicectomy rates are usually above 20%, which is now considered unacceptably high because of increased risk to patients and the availability of diagnostic facilities to aid clinical decision-making. Our negative appendicectomy rate over a 4-year retrospective period was 29.7% in males, and 47% in females. These reduced to 11% and 10%, respectively, after the introduction of laparoscopy for doubtful cases of acute abdominal pain.
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PMID:Another look at acute appendicitis in tropical Africa: and the value of laparoscopy in diagnosis. 848 83

The diagnostic work up of an acute abdomen may be more difficult in pregnant than in non-pregnant women due to the normal anatomical and physiological changes that occur during pregnancy. Delayed diagnoses and treatment may have more serious consequences for pregnant women than for other patients. We report the cases of two pregnant women, one with a volvulus of the small intestine and the other with a perforated appendix. We discuss important aspects of the diagnostic work up for acute abdomen with surgical etiology in pregnant women. If a surgical etiology is suspected in a pregnant women with acute abdominal pain, the patient should be examined and followed closely both by a surgeon and a gynaecologist until a final diagnosis is reached.
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PMID:[Acute abdomen in pregnancy. Diagnosis of surgical causes]. 865 50

Acute abdominal pain is a frequent diagnostic and therapeutic challenge in hematologic patients. We report on the very rare case of organ endometriosis with acute abdominal symptoms in a 43-year-old female patient with AML-M5, starting 4 days after induction chemotherapy with idarubicin, ara-C, and etoposide. The patient presented with an acute abdomen with clinical findings of acute cholecystitis, subileus, and local pain in the right upper abdomen accompanied by severe diarrhea. Probably due to impaired intestinal resorption, menstrual bleeding occurred despite regular administration of lynestrenol. Ultrasound examination of the abdomen disclosed a tumor with poor echoes in the pouch of Douglas, a subcapsular splenic hemorrhage, and a thickened gallbladder wall with surrounding edema. A cystic adnex tumor was confirmed by endovaginal ultrasound. Based on history and the findings on ultrasound, an endometriosis was diagnosed, and the LHRH agonist (nafarelin) was administered nasally in combination with lynestrenol. Following this medication the abdominal pain ceased, supporting the diagnosis of endometriosis. Nasal administration of an LHRH agonist in the following cycles of chemotherapy was effective in preventing further abdominal discomfort and vaginal bleeding. LHRH agonists should be given to patients with known endometriosis before starting myeloablative chemotherapy to prevent painful hemorrhage from endometriosis.
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PMID:Acute abdomen due to endometriosis as a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge in the treatment of acute myelocytic leukemia. 903 12

Despite physiological advances and recent progress in pain relief, early analgesia for patients with acute abdominal pain is not a conventional endpoint. In clinical practice, priority is often given to diagnosis and management decisions. There are few controlled trials to settle the issue and opinions are still divided. recent studies suggest than early and effective analgesia in acute abdomen does not interfere with diagnosis, and even facilitates initial examination. Various modes of analgesia can be considered.
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PMID:[Abdominal syndromes and analgesia]. 903 30

From the surgical point of view acute abdominal pain is the cardinal symptom of acute abdomen. Additional leading symptoms of acute abdomen are tension of the abdominal wall, peristaltic disorders and, in rare cases, shock symptoms. Acute abdomen is an operational diagnosis for painful, in part life threatening diseases of various etiologies. The most frequent cause is acute appendicitis, followed by cholecystitis and by diverse forms of ileus. These three diseases together are the cause of acute abdomen in more than 80% of cases. Over 90% of cases with acute abdomen are treated surgically. The decision in favour of a surgical intervention must be determined within minutes to hours depending on the etiology. A delay may lead to further, partly most serious sequelae.
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PMID:[Acute abdominal pain. Surgeon's viewpoint]. 908 28


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