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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Abdominal pain
, nausea, flatulence and diarrhea are the main clinical symptoms in chronic
amebiasis
; diarrhea and constipation may alternate in many cases, whereas constipation alone does occur only rarely. These symptoms may persist over years, with long asymptomatic intervals. In most cases cysts of entameba histolytica can be demonstrated in the feces, accompanied rather often by dientameba fragilis in Israel. 835 carriers of entameba histolytica were found among our patients between 1968 and 1974. Patients exhibiting 3 of the above mentioned clinical symptoms and having entameba histolytica in the stools are defined to be suffering from chronic recurrent
amebiasis
; 371 (= 44%) of our patients could be classified in this group. In spite of the fact, that the number of cases of acute
amebiasis
and its complications in Israel has been reduced considerably in the past, chronic
amebiasis
continues to be a clinical and epidemiological problem, its incidence being scarcely diminished.
...
PMID:[Chronic recurrent intestinal amebiasis in Israel (author's transl)]. 49 12
Amebiasis
, that is, infection with Entameba histolytica, continues to be endemic in the United States, with liver abscess occurring as an infrequent but constant complication. Seven cases are reported, with epidemiologic investigation of two. Reliable findings in hepatic abscess include fever,
abdominal pain
, respiratory distress, tender abdomen, and large, tender liver. Anemia, elevated white count with left shift, and the radiographic findings of an elevated right hemidiaphragm are constant. Epidemiologically,
amebiasis
occurs in clusters in the United States with person-to-person transmission predominant in spread. Infection is associated with poor sanitation and crowding. Investigation of the families of two patients documented 9/21 carriers and an additional 3/21 who were seropositive, as well as crowding and poor sanitation. In this country, treatment of a patient with amebic disease should include investigation of his home and family.
...
PMID:Amebic liver abscess in children: clinical and epidemiologic features. 51 19
The clinical findings in 56 patients with hepatic
amebiasis
are reviewed. This illness was most frequent in male black patients, 20-39 years old. The clinical picture is dominated by upper right quadrant
abdominal pain
, general malaise, pain on percussion of the right hypochondrium and tender hepatomegaly. Jaundice is not rare and appears to have no prognostic significance. The importance of early diagnosis is emphasized.
...
PMID:Hepatic amebiasis, analysis of 56 cases. I. Clinical findings. 92 Jul 12
A 35-year-old male who had travelled extensively in the tropics presented with severe anorexia and vomiting associated with fever of 39-40 degrees C during a 4-day period. The clinical findings were entirely negative. In 1973, he had been given metronidazole for amebic dysentery, since when recurrent attacks of diarrhea and
abdominal pain
had been treated with iodoquinoleines. Stool examination was negative for amebae. Liver scan revealed a suspect "expansive process" in the right lobe. The presumptive diagnosis of amebic abscess was made and metronidazole therapy was started. In less than 24 h the patient became afebrile. The abscess was confirmed by a further liver scan. The definitive diagnosis of
amebiasis
was established 16 days later when the immunofluorescence level, which had been previously negative, became positive 1/480. This case demonstrates the dangers of the indiscriminate use of iodoquinoleines in patients who have travelled in tropical countries. The amebic liver abscess may be silent locally while causing systemic manifestations such as fever. Early treatment of hepatic
amebiasis
is recommended even with a presumptive diagnosis. Serological tests during the development of an amebic abscess may be negative and should be repeated after several days of therapy.
...
PMID:[Amebic liver abscess of unusual presentation]. 99 99
Among 72 patients clinically suspected of Entamoeba histolytica (E. histolytica) infections, 39 positive cases (54%) were detected serologically by the indirect hemagglutination (IHA) test. Parasitologically, microscopic examination of three consecutive stool specimens from all these patients indicated positivity for E. histolytica cysts and or trophozoites in 10 of the patients with IHA antibody titers greater than or equal to 1:128, which is of clinical significance. Another 2 patients were parasitologically positive but showed low IHA antibody titres (1:32-1:64); follow up indicated response to treatment with metronidazole. The highest serological positivity (100%) were detected in patients with liver abscess, all were clinically proven cases of extra-intestinal
amoebiasis
. IHA antibody levels of clinical significance were seen in all four patients with chronic dysentery with parasitological evidence of E. histolytica in their stools. In a group of patients with
abdominal pain
nine positives were detected serologically, four of which were positively diagnosed concurrently by parasitology; the remaining five patient's sera showed high IHA antibody titres with absence of cysts or trophozoites in stools, indicative possibly of persistence of antibodies from past infection. The serologic determination of E. histolytica IHA antibodies in a control group consisting of normal healthy school children and adults of both sexes without any clinical evidence of
amoebiasis
showed the absence of any positive titres of clinical significance; low titres (1:32-1:64) were detected in 5.2% of 232 sera tested. Parasitological examination of three consecutive stool specimens from all individuals in the control group showed the presence of cysts of E. histolytica in just two among 232 tested (0.9%).
...
PMID:Indirect haemagglutination (IHA) test in the serodiagnosis of amoebiasis. 254 99
A forty-eight year-old man complained of upper
abdominal pain
and diarrhea with mucinous bloody stool. He had not been abroad. Except high fever, anemia, leukocytosis and elevated rate of erythrocyte sedimentation, laboratory findings were not abnormal. Gastrofiberscopy showed the protrusion of gastric mucosa with a hollow on its surface in the angle. Abdominal CT scan and echogram revealed an abscess in the right hepatic lobe and an abscess in the left lobe. Ulceration and small protrusion of the rectal mucosa were found by romanoscopy. Stool examinations could not reveal amebas, but serological test for
amebiasis
by the Ouchterlony method showed positive. Under the diagnosis of the perforation into the stomach of amebic liver abscess, he was treated with Metronidazole and tetracycline. But, as a diffuse shadow appeared in the right thoracic cavity on the chest x-ray films with bloody sputa, perforation of amebic liver abscess to the right thoracic cavity was suspected. Laparotomy showed the communication of the abscess to gastric lumen. The post operative course was uneventful. We reported a case with the rare complication of amebic liver abscess.
...
PMID:[A case of amebic liver abscess rupturing into the stomach]. 357 79
An elderly woman, resident throughout her life in Scotland presented with
abdominal pain
and diarrhoea. A provisional diagnosis of ulcerative colitis was made on sigmoidoscopy. At post mortem Entamoeba Histolytica was demonstrated in considerable numbers in the mucosal ulcers. It would appear though extremely rare that
amoebiasis
should be considered in the differential diagnosis of colonic ulceration.
...
PMID:Amoebiasis as a cause of death in a Scottish resident. 627 15
Infections with Entamoeba histolytica do not necessarily cause disease in those infected. The parasite may act as commensal (cysts living in the bowel) or it may cause a broad spectrum of clinical illness. Some of the factors causing overt disease are poorly understood. An acute amebic dysentery is accompanied by bloody stools,
abdominal pain
and indigestion. The most important extraintestinal complication of an amebic infection is a liver abscess causing severe pain, fever, nausea and vomiting. The diagnosis of an amebic infection is based upon isolation of the parasite from the stools. Extraintestinal
amebiasis
is diagnosed - apart from the clinical picture - by serology. For treatment of intestinal
amebiasis
so-called contact-amebicides can be recommended. An amebic abscess of the liver usually responds well to dehydroemetine, metronidazole or any other derivative or imidazole and chloroquine. Surgical treatment of amebic liver abscess is only required if complications arise.
...
PMID:[Amebiasis]. 628 39
A case report of a 36-year-old black homosexual man with right upper- and lower-quadrant
abdominal pain
is presented. When exploratory surgery for appendicitis was performed, an abscess, consistent with an amebic abscess, was encountered in the right lobe of the liver. This abscess was evacuated, and a drain was placed. A serum sample taken at the time of surgery showed high titers of antibody to Entamoeba histolytica; metronidazole therapy was instituted, and the patient made an uneventful recovery. Since
amebiasis
is epidemic in the gay community, health care personnel should be aware of the various modes of transmission, as well as of the diagnoses, optimal management, and indications for surgery in patients with amebic liver abscess. It is noted that amebic liver abscess appears to be a less frequent complication of
amebiasis
among the male homosexual population than among other groups.
...
PMID:Amebic liver abscess in a homosexual man. 631 72
Extracolonic
amebiasis
must be distinguished from bacterial abscesses and neoplastic disease. Newer technology in diagnostic and interventional radiology permits such lesions to be aspirated more accurately for both diagnostic and therapeutic purposes, often averting an open surgical procedure. Paracecal and hepatic masses of one patient, who presented with fever and
abdominal pain
, were shown to be amebic abscesses by cytopathologic examination of material obtained by ultrasonically guided percutaneous fine needle aspiration. Another patient, who was thought to have metastatic carcinoma, died, with clinically unrecognized extensive pulmonary and hepatic
amebiasis
proven at autopsy. A review of this patient's sputum cytology smears showed numerous trophozoites of Entamoeba histolytica that were not recognized earlier. Cytopathologic studies of sputum and fine needle aspirates is an important means of detecting extracolonic
amebiasis
and distinguishing these lesions from neoplastic disease.
...
PMID:Cytopathologic diagnosis of extracolonic amebiasis. 658 Aug 1
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