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)

Mesenteric venous thrombosis is a rather rare condition posing diagnostic problems and very often with an obscure etiology. Recently, various coagulation deficiencies were found as the main etiologic factor. A case of a 75-year-old man with acute abdomen is presented. Exploratory laparotomy revealed a 250 cm necrosis of the small intestine. Patient was successfully treated by resecting the entire involved segment of the bowel. After a complete coagulation profile examination, deficiencies of protein C and anti-thrombin III were found and were considered as the main cause of the disease. In cases with known coagulation deficiencies the presence of an acute abdomen should raise suspicion of mesenteric venous thrombosis.
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PMID:Mesenteric venous thrombosis due to coagulation deficiencies - a case report. 891 41

Deep venous thrombosis is an extremely rare cause of acute abdomen and is often difficult to diagnose. Protein C and protein S deficiencies are rare genetic abnormalities that predispose the patient to thrombophilia and lead to thrombosis. We report the case of a previously healthy 7-year-old boy with iliofemoral thrombosis due to protein C and protein S deficiencies mimicking acute abdomen.
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PMID:Deep vein thrombosis associated with protein C and protein S deficiency: an unusual cause of acute abdomen. 2154 30

Omental gangrene is an infrequent cause of acute abdomen with unclear etiology. Hypercoagualable states like protein C or protein S deficiency have never been implicated in the etiology of omental gangrene. We present this case report of a patient having protein C and protein S deficiency presenting with omental gangrene and extensive porto mesenteric thrombosis.
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PMID:Omental gangrene and porto-mesenteric thrombosis in a patient of protein C and protein s deficiency. 2442 32