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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In
sickle cell anaemia
, red cell dehydration increases intracellular HbS concentration and promotes sickling. Higher erythrocyte magnesium reduces water loss through negative regulation of membrane transporters. Hydroxycarbamide (also known as hydroxyurea) reduces sickling partly by increasing intracellular HbF. Combining drugs with distinct mechanisms could offer additive effects. A phase I trial combining oral magnesium pidolate and hydroxycarbamide was performed to estimate the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and toxicity of magnesium. Cohorts of three children with HbSS, who were on a stable dose of hydroxycarbamide (median 28.5 mg/kg/d), received magnesium pidolate for 6 months beginning at 83 mg/kg/d. The dose was escalated by 50% for subsequent cohorts. Laboratory evaluations were performed at 0, 3, 6 and 9 months. Sixteen children (aged 4-12 years) participated. All four dose-limiting toxicities (grade III diarrhoea and
abdominal pain
) occurred within the first month of starting magnesium. Additionally, diarrhoea grades I (n = 1) and II (n = 3), and
abdominal pain
grade II (n = 3) occurred. Hydroxycarbamide dose reduction or interruption was not required. The MTD for magnesium pidolate used in combination with hydroxycarbamide was 125 mg/kg/d. KCl co-transporter activity declined after 3 months of magnesium pidolate (P = 0.02). A phase II study is needed to investigate the efficacy of this drug combination.
...
PMID:Phase I study of magnesium pidolate in combination with hydroxycarbamide for children with sickle cell anaemia. 1799 Dec 98
Splenic abscess is not an uncommon complication of patients with sickle-cell disease. Here we describe an 18 year-old boy with
sickle cell disease
and left upper quadrant
abdominal pain
. Computerized axial tomography revealed left sided free flowing pleural effusion and splenomegaly with liquefaction and possible gas formation. The splenic fluid grew an unusual organism known as Bacteroides distasonis. The patient received antimicrobial therapy and underwent a splenectomy with full recovery. The spleen was cystically infarcted and measured 22 x 16 x 5 cm. The capsule was thickened and covered by fibrinous exudate. Histopathologic examination of the spleen showed complete necrosis with reparative fibrosis. This case presents an unusual cause of splenic abscess due to Bacteroides distasonis with a subacute to chronic course. The presence of fever and left sided pleuritic chest pain in patients with
sickle cell disease
should raise the suspicion of splenic abscess.
...
PMID:Bacteroides (Parabacteroides) distasonis splenic abscess in a sickle cell patient. 1817 10
Sickle cell disease
is caused by molecular abnormalities in the formation of hemoglobin, leading to pain crisis from recurrent vascular occlusion by sickled hemoglobin. Impaired flow in the microvasculature can lead to ischemia, tissue infarction and ulceration.
Abdominal pain
, a common complaint in
sickle cell disease
, can be due to an uncommon etiology, ischemic duodenal ulceration. This is due to primary mucosal infarction caused by sickling, leading to poor healing of infarcted areas. Prompt endoscopic and/or urgent surgical intervention should be considered, particularly if anticoagulation is an issue, as proton pump inhibitor use is ineffective in healing this type of ulcer.
...
PMID:Ischemic duodenal ulcer, an unusual presentation of sickle cell disease. 1839 28
Sickle cell disease
is a disorder that produces significant morbidity and mortality. Vaso-occlusive pain crises are the most common presenting symptom associated with sickle cell patients. A rare, yet important to recognize, complication of
sickle cell disease
is acute colonic pseudoobstruction, also known as Ogilvie's syndrome. These patients may present with symptoms that are difficult to distinguish from other etiologies of
abdominal pain
, but a thorough diagnostic workup can provide important clues. Furthermore, there is no agreement on optimal treatment of pseudoobstruction. We report the first pediatric case of acute pseudoobstruction secondary to
sickle cell disease
that was treated successfully with neostigmine. Early recognition of this phenomenon is important as it alters patient management, can be treated medically, and may avoid unnecessary surgical intervention.
...
PMID:Acute colonic pseudoobstruction in a child with sickle cell disease treated with neostigmine. 1904 Sep 54
Renal abscess is rare in children and the usual presenting features include fever, lumbar pain,
abdominal pain
and occasional flank mass. Renal ultrasonography facilitates an early diagnosis and helps in percutaneous drainage. We herewith report on a child with
sickle cell anemia
who developed a renal abscess.
...
PMID:Renal abscess in a child with sickle cell anemia. 1923 20
Sickle cell-induced ischemic colitis is a rare yet potentially fatal complication of
sickle cell anemia
. Frequent pain crises with heavy analgesia may obscure and prolong this important diagnosis. Our patient was a 29-year-old female with
sickle cell disease
who was admitted with left lower quadrant
abdominal pain
. A diagnostic workup, including chemistries, complete blood count, blood cultures, chest x-ray, computerized tomography scanning, and colonoscopy, was performed to identify the etiology of her symptoms. This case highlights the importance of differentiating simple pain crisis from more serious and life-threatening ischemic bowel. A review of the literature compares this case to others reported and gives a method for diagnosing and treating this complication of
sickle cell disease
.
...
PMID:Sickle cell-induced ischemic colitis. 1963 96
Sickle cell disease
(
SCD
) is an autosomal recessive abnormality of the beta-globin chain of hemoglobin (Hb), resulting in poorly deformable sickled cells that cause microvascular occlusion and hemolytic anemia. The spleen is almost always affected by
SCD
, with microinfarcts within the first 36 months of life resulting in splenic atrophy. Acute liver disorders causing right-sided
abdominal pain
include acute vaso-occlusive crisis, liver infarction, and acute hepatic crisis. Chronic liver disease might be due to hemosiderosis and hepatitis and possibly to
SCD
itself if small, clinically silent microvascular occlusions occur chronically. Black pigment gallstones caused by elevated bilirubin excretion are common. Their small size permits them to travel into the common bile duct but cause only low-grade obstruction, so hyperbilirubinemia rather than bile duct dilatation is typical. Whether cholecystectomy should be done in asymptomatic individuals is controversial. The most common laboratory abnormality is an elevation of unconjugated bilirubin level. Bilirubin and lactate dehydrogenase levels correlate with one another, suggesting that chronic hemolysis and ineffective erythropoiesis, rather than liver disease, are the sources of hyperbilirubinemia.
Abdominal pain
is very common in
SCD
and is usually due to sickling, which resolves with supportive care. Computed tomography scans might be ordered for severe or unremitting pain. The liver typically shows sickled erythrocytes and Kupffer cell enlargement acutely and hemosiderosis chronically. The safety of liver biopsies has been questioned, particularly during acute sickling crisis. Treatments include blood transfusions, exchange transfusions, iron-chelating agents, hydroxyurea, and allogeneic stem-cell transplantation.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal and hepatic complications of sickle cell disease. 2021 64
Fasciitis-like proliferations are said to be uncommon in the viscera; a fasciitis-like pattern of gallbladder injury may not be rare, but to our knowledge it has not been explicitly reported as such in any age group. Osseous metaplasia, or heterotopic bone, in the gallbladder is rare and has not to our knowledge been reported in a pediatric patient. We report a 7-year-old boy with
sickle cell disease
who presented with right upper quadrant
abdominal pain
. An ultrasonograph demonstrated a dilated common bile duct with sludge and stones. A cholecystectomy was performed. Grossly the gallbladder showed numerous pigmented choleliths, and histologically there was cholecystitis with a fasciitis-like fibrous proliferation containing scattered osteoclast-like giant cells and an area of osseous metaplasia. This report, describing a pattern that could be termed "cholecystitis ossificans," expands the histologic spectrum of chronic cholecystitis, a common disease with a poorly understood pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Cholecystitis and cholelithiasis associated with an intramural fasciitis-like proliferation and osseous metaplasia. 2046 25
Cholelithiasis is rarely seen in toddlers and school-aged children, even in the setting of
sickle cell anemia
. In addition to more common etiologies, such as gastroenteritis, constipation, and urinary tract infection, the differential diagnoses of acute abdominal pain in young children with
sickle cell disease
include vaso-occlusive pain crisis and splenic sequestration. We describe a case of a toddler with
sickle cell disease
initially presenting with
abdominal pain
who was found to have symptomatic cholelithiasis.
...
PMID:Cholelithiasis in a toddler with sickle cell disease. 2164 88
Abdominal pain
is a frequent occurrence among the pediatric population and can be a diagnostic challenge. Trichobezoar is a differential diagnosis that is often neglected. Different from previously reported cases, we present a 3-year-old girl with
sickle cell disease
with complaints of acute abdominal pain, suspecting sickle cell splenic sequestration. The child presented to the emergency department with sharp epigastric pain and an associated palpable upper abdominal mass. This case illustrates a large obstructing gastric trichobezoar and summarizes both the diagnostic modalities and treatment.
...
PMID:Gastric trichobezoar: abdominal mass in a child with sickle cell disease. 2206 59
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