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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten episodes of massive transaminase increase with hepatic necrosis were observed in 7 patients after infusion of megluminioglycamide (Biligram). The patients were 3 men and 4 women aged 49 to 65 years with
biliary tract disease
(n = 1), recurrent pancreatitis (n = 1), hyperlipidaemia and minimal toxic liver damage (n = 1), pyelonephritis (n = 1), , arteriitis (n = 1), and pseudo-LE (n = 1). In 6 patients there was an increase of the alkaline phosphatase without icterus before the investigation and a slight increase of transaminases in 3 patients. After infusion of 100 ml of Biligram in 5 patients and of 200 ml in 2 patients there was an abrupt increase of GPT (98-2202 U/l) with a lesser increase of GOT. The alkaline phosphatase activity remained unchanged. Three patients showed symptoms such as upper
abdominal pain
, fever erythema, or conjunctivitis. Histologically all patients showed centrolobular necroses. Transaminases should be checked 2 days after intravenous cholangiograms. In patients with a definite increase reexposure should be avoided.
...
PMID:[Hepatic necroses after infusion cholangiography (author's transl)]. 63 57
Twenty-eight patients with chronic, incapacitating upper
abdominal pain
after cholecystectomy had excision of the common wall between the terminal bile duct and duct of Wirsung (ampullary septum). Twenty-two also had a sphincteroplasty: six had had this procedure previously. Pancreatic function studies, scintiscans, ultrasound and pancreatograms were non-diagnositic. Hyperamylasemia was an uncommon finding. Eight patients were found to have evidence of mild pancreatitis at exploration. There was gross scarring of the ampullary septum in 22 cases. Histologic examination revealed inflammation in 12 septa; the degree of fibrosis could not be assessed since 14 control septa from autopsy material free from
biliary tract disease
revealed a comparable degree of collagen and smooth muscle. There were no deaths, and minimal morbidity. In follow-up from seven to 59 months (mean = 26), 16 patients are relatively free of pain, five have occasional episodes which require non-narcotic analgesics, and seven have gained no relief from the operative procedure. A randomized controlled trial is recommended.
...
PMID:Transampullary septectomy for post-cholecystectomy pain. 90 88
Twenty patients with suppurative cholangitis were seen at the Massachusetts General Hospital over a nine year period. Fifteen patients had acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis due to complete obstruction of the common duct, many with coma, hypotension, and positive blood cultures. Sixty per cent of patients were older than seventy years, and most had a history of
biliary tract disease
. Although most had jaundice,
abdominal pain
, and fever, clinical symptoms were variable. The diagnosis of cholangitis was made in only 30 per cent of patients before autopsy or surgery. Eighteen patients had calculi in the common duct, and two had primary fibrosis of the ampulla. Patients explored less than 24 hours after admission or deterioration died less often than those operated on after some delay. Most patients underwent common duct exploration and four had a concomitant sphincterotomy. In one instance, cholecystostomy only was performed and this patient died because of ongoing sepsis. The overall mortality was 40 per cent; of those subjected to operation, 25 per cent died in the hospital. Recovery was dramatic among most survivors, and calculous disease did not recur, except for two patients with retained stones. Prophylactic cholecystectomy is recommended to prevent the occurrence of this subtle and highly dangerous syndrome.
...
PMID:The urgency of diagnosis and surgical treatment of acute suppurative cholangitis. 127 37
A 63-year-old male complained of right upper
abdominal pain
and jaundice. Laboratory data on admission showed hyperbilirubinemia, elevation of biliary enzymes and an extraordinarily high value of serum CA19-9 (60,000 U/ml). Diagnostic imaging modalities including abdominal ultrasonogram, abdominal CT and PTC suggested a stone impaction of the common bile duct. Jaundice subsided after PTC-drainage in association with decreasing serum CA19-9 value, which returned to the normal level six weeks later. Spontaneous delivery of the stone via the fistula was confirmed by cholangiography through the drainage tube. Though there are few reports of such a high serum CA19-9 level, the possibility of benign
biliary tract disease
should be considered in patients showing an extraordinarily high serum CA19-9 value.
...
PMID:A case of common bile duct stone with cholangitis presenting an extraordinarily high serum CA19-9 value. 163 61
An analysis of postmortem investigations between 1980 and 1985 revealed 43 patients with acute pancreatitis. In 13 (30.2%) of them, the diagnosis was first established at autopsy. In eight of the latter patients, the diagnosis could have been present on admission. The etiology was alcoholism in three patients, hypothermia in one,
biliary tract disease
in one, and unknown in three patients. In five patients, acute pancreatitis developed after gastric, pancreatic, or biliary tract surgery.
Abdominal pain
was present in only one patient. Amylase levels had been estimated in 11 patients, but the level was in the diagnostic range (greater than or equal to 3 times of upper normal level) in only four. Consequently, ultrasound examination was performed in only two of the latter four patients, but failed to show the pancreas because of intestinal gas. To diagnose acute pancreatitis at an earlier stage and to improve therapy and prognosis, we recommend that serum amylase levels be measured and ultrasound examination be performed. If the results are inconclusive, this should be followed by computed tomography for all abdominal emergency cases and for patients who have undergone cardiopulmonary or upper abdominal surgery, especially when the patients deteriorate or fail to improve postoperatively.
...
PMID:Undetected fatal acute pancreatitis: why is the disease so frequently overlooked? 180 1
This article review newer concepts of diagnosis and therapy for patients with acute pancreatitis. Although the pathogenesis are incompletely understood, much progress has recently been made in treatment of symptoms and medical support of the critically ill patients. The most common associate factors include:
biliary tract disease
(lithiasis), alcohol abuse, trauma and hyperlipoproteinemia. Most patients have
abdominal pain
, nausea and vomiting, fever, abdominal tenderness and hypovolemia of varying degrees. Renal clearance of amilase is increased, the ratio of renal clearance to that of creatinine is very important in patients with hypovolemia or an underlying renal disease. The definition of risk factors, with regard to morbility or mortality. Those patients at great risk require critical care treatment in an ICU and meticulous pulmonary, cardiac, hematological and metabolic monitoring and treatment of any the abdominal complications.
...
PMID:[Acute pancreatitis]. 182 Jan 83
The diagnostic and therapeutic role of ERCP in 42 patients ranging from 1 to 19 years of age is discussed. ERCP provided useful additional information in 15 patients with
biliary tract disease
, 15 patients with pancreatic disease, and 9 patients with
abdominal pain
. The appropriate duct was cannulated in 95% of cases. Mild pancreatitis occurred in two patients after ERCP. Endoscopic papillotomy was successful in five patients. ERCP plays an important part in the investigation of unexplained biliary tract and pancreatic disease. It rarely demonstrates abnormal pathology in patients with otherwise unexplained
abdominal pain
.
...
PMID:The role of ERCP in children and adolescents. 221 Feb 77
Pancreatitis is a common but rather poorly understood entity most often associated with alcohol abuse or
biliary tract disease
. Despite the availability of a variety of diagnostic tests and imaging techniques, the diagnosis of pancreatitis continues to be primarily a clinical one. Of major concern to the emergency physician is distinguishing pancreatitis from other, potentially lethal, causes of
abdominal pain
, and identifying those patients with severe pancreatitis who are at risk for a complicated course secondary to the remote systemic effects of the disease.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis. 222 92
Acute pancreatitis is a disease characterized by
abdominal pain
, low-grade fever, abdominal tenderness and rigidity, and moderate elevation of the white blood cell count. A widely used revised classification of pancreatitis is that proposed in 1984 at Marseille. It only distinguishes between acute and chronic pancreatitis. In 61 cases were 40 men and 21 women. The mean age in the total series was 52.5 years. The etiology of the acute condition was alcoholism in 32.8% and
biliary tract disease
in 23%. In 9.8% the acute pancreatitis is associated with alimentary tract diseases (adipositas, hyperlipidemia). The severity of acute pancreatitis is pathological anatomy determined by three stages. In pathogenesis the process of digestion is caused by activated pancreatic enzyme with acinar cell injury. The acinar cell is normally protected from the action of its own enzymes by elaborate intracellular compartmentation of enzymes. Acute pancreatitis is triggered by pancreatic phospholipase A leading to necrosis of lipolytically active fat cells with release of membrane-toxic fatty acids with following destruction of adjacent tissue. Fat necrosis initiates an acute inflammatory reaction with immigration of granulocytes and liberation of kinins, which activate pancreatic enzyme. Pancreatic enzymes are similar to lysosomal enzymes with regard to substrate specificity. Activation will be also triggered by lysosomal enzymes of necrotic acinar cells.
...
PMID:[Acute pancreatitis--etiology, pathological anatomy and pathogenesis]. 226 Mar 61
The incidence of chronic pancreatitis in China is unknown. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), surgery, and autopsy demonstrated that chronic pancreatitis in China is mainly secondary to cholelithiasis and other diseases of the bile ducts. Stones in the common bile duct, both intra- and extrahepatic, are extremely frequent in China. Such patients may have scores, even hundreds, of stones filling the common bile duct and its radicles.
Biliary tract disease
constitutes the etiology of chronic pancreatitis in 40-50% of our patients. The prolongation of necrosis, abscess, or pseudocyst after acute pancreatitis may also lead to chronic inflammation of the pancreas, as may a diverticulum at the second part of the duodenum. The pancreatitis observed in China is apt to be of the chronic relapsing type. Pancreatic ductal stones and ascaris lumbricoides may sometimes be associated with chronic inflammation of the pancreas; however, the cause of chronic pancreatitis is obscure in a large segment of the patients. Beside the ordinary clinical manifestation of chronic pancreatitis, such as
abdominal pain
, fever, jaundice, and steatorrhea, regional (splenic) portal hypertension may be observed. ERCP has been useful in diagnosis, and the major changes found in the pancreatic duct are discussed. Since the symptoms and signs of chronic pancreatitis in China are usually mild or moderate, the patient with intractable pain is uncommon, most being treated with medication. Most surgical procedures utilized to treat chronic pancreatitis are related to the biliary system, such as cholecystectomy with internal or external drainage of the choledochus. Internal drainage of a pancreatic pseudocyst, partial pancreatectomy, and pancreaticojejunostomy are also performed, as indicated, but are less frequent.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis in China: etiology and management. 240 36
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