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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The first case of AIDS positively identified in a non-foreigner in Taiwan was a 25-year-old unmarried male who had practiced homosexuality for ten years. The patient began to have
abdominal pain
accompanied with loose stools and weight loss in June 1985, followed by fever, cough, headache, dizziness, and loss of memory. Facial hyperpigmentation and extensive oroesophageal
candidiasis
were noted. Laboratory studies showed severe lymphopenia with a reversed T-helper to T-suppressor ratio, cutaneous anergy and polyclonal gammopathy. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibodies were positive by ELISA and Western blot, and the virus was isolated from the blood. At autopsy, disseminated cytomegalovirus infection, extensive CNS toxoplasmosis and early lesions of Kaposi's sarcoma were demonstrated. The detection of HIV in the adrenal medulla supports the consensus that the virus is neurotropic.
...
PMID:An autopsy-proved case of AIDS in Taiwan. 330 20
The records of 47 patients with a perinephric abscess diagnosed from 1975 to 1986 at 8 San Francisco Bay Area hospitals were reviewed. The mean age was 51 years. Fifty-five percent were females and 45%, males. The left kidney was affected in 47% of cases, the right kidney in 40%, both in 4%, and a transplanted pelvic kidney in 9%. Fever (55%), chills or diaphoresis (47%), flank pain (40%),
abdominal pain
(40%), and nausea or vomiting (32%) were the most common presenting symptoms. About half the patients had symptoms for 1 week or less and 12% had no symptoms. Fever was documented before diagnosis in 88% of patients. Abdominal mass (13%) or tenderness (49%), and flank mass (9%) or tenderness (42%) were seen less frequently, and 11% of patients did not have fever, flank, or abdominal findings. The most frequent underlying conditions included previous urologic surgery (45%), previous urinary tract infection (38%), diabetes mellitus (36%), and urinary tract stones (36%). Cultures of perinephric abscesses yielded gram-negative aerobes in 52% of patients, primarily Escherichia coli. Staphylococcus aureus was isolated in 26% of patients and anaerobes in 17%. A single pathogen was isolated in 71% and multiple isolates in 29%. Of interest and great potential therapeutic importance was culture of anaerobes, primarily Bacteroides spp. in 17%, Enterococcus spp. in 7%, and Candida albicans in 7%. Positive blood and urine cultures identified perinephric abscess organisms exactly in 58% and 37% of cases, respectively. Routine laboratory tests such as the white blood cell count and urinalysis were insensitive and non-specific for perinephric abscess. Leukocytosis and anemia at admission were seen in slightly more than half of the patients. For radiologic diagnosis, computerized tomographic scanning was most helpful. Ultrasound and intravenous pyelography were falsely negative in about one-third of cases. Mortality (13%) was low in this series when compared with earlier studies, and probably reflects modern medical care. Six patients (13%) died during hospitalization, 2 of whom had diagnosis of PNA established only at autopsy. Drainage of the perinephric abscess was carried out by open surgical drainage in 64% of patients, percutaneous drainage in 19%, and both in 13%. The initial procedure, whether open surgical drainage or percutaneous catheter drainage, was usually successful. Late complications included nephrocutaneous fistulas in 3 patients and disseminated
candidiasis
in 1 patient.
...
PMID:Perinephric abscess. Modern diagnosis and treatment in 47 cases. 335 13
Uncomplicated urogenital and concomitant oropharyngeal gonorrhea in 424 male and female patients was treated in a randomized comparative study with 0.5 g of cefodizime (89 men and 54 women), 1 g of cefodizime (87 men and 52 women), or 1 g of cefotaxime (86 men and 56 women). The cure rates were 100% for men and women in the group given 0.5 g of cefodizime, 100% for men and women in the group given 1 g of cefodizime, and 99% for men and 100% for women in the group given 1 g of cefotaxime. The MICs of cefodizime and cefotaxime for the isolate of Neisseria gonorrhoeae ranged from 0.004 to 0.06 micrograms/ml. Chlamydia trachomatis was isolated before treatment in 15% and after treatment in 13% of all patients. Side effects, such as nausea, diarrhea,
abdominal pain
, genital
candidiasis
, and pain at the site of injection, developed in 4% of the patients given cefodizime. Side effects, such as vertigo, genital
candidiasis
, fatigability, and diarrhea, developed in 4% of the patients treated with cefotaxime. In both groups of patients, the side effects were mild and transient. Cefodizime and cefotaxime are safe and effective agents in the treatment of uncomplicated urogenital gonorrhea.
...
PMID:Randomized comparative study of 0.5 and 1 g of cefodizime (HR 221) versus 1 g of cefotaxime for acute uncomplicated urogenital gonorrhea. 337 56
Ofloxacin, a new fluoroquinolone, was given to fifty patients (29 females and 21 males) aged 25 to 86 years with urinary tract infection or prostatitis. Urinary tract infections usually chronic and associated with urologic anomalies, included 17 cases of cystitis and 19 cases of pyelonephritis. 14 patients had prostatitis. Pathogens recovered from the urine were 26 E. coli, 2 Citrobacter, 4 Proteus mirabilis, 2 Klebsiella, 2 Enterobacter, 3 Serratia, 3 Staphylococcus aureus and 11 Pseudomonas. Minimal inhibitory concentrations of ofloxacin ranged from 0.03 to 0.12 microgram/ml (mean MIC: 0.6 microgram/ml) for 27 nalidixic acid-sensitive strains, and from 0.25 to 4 micrograms/ml (mean MIC: 1 microgram/ml) for 26 nalidixic acid-resistant strains. Ofloxacin was given as single drug therapy in all patients, in a daily dosage of 200 mg b.i.d. in 46 patients and 400 mg b.i.d. in 4 patients, for 7 to 97 days (average 40 days). Follow-up after discontinuation of treatment was 3 to 12 months. Therapeutic results were as follows: 17 cures for the 17 cystitis patients, 17 cures and 2 failures by relapse for the 19 cases of pyelonephritis, and 11 cures, 1 failure by persistence of bacteriuria and failure by relapse for the 14 cases of prostatitis. Digestive disorders, i.e. nausea,
abdominal pain
, constipation, occurred in 6 patients and required withdrawal of the drug in 1;
candidiasis
of the tongue was recorded in one patient and digestive complaints with neuropsychic disorders in another. Two patients had short-lived, moderate leukopenia with granulopenia and one had transient worsening of preexisting renal failure. Hepatic tolerance was good.
...
PMID:[Ofloxacin (RU 43280): clinical evaluation in urinary and prostatic infections]. 353 29
We evaluated the efficacy and safety of ceftriaxone in 50 adults with serious infections, usually giving 1 g every 12 h. Of the 35 patients who could be evaluated for clinical efficacy, 15 had failed on previous therapy, 15 had nosocomial infections, and all but 1 had underlying diseases. One patient had three sites of infection. Favorable responses were seen in 34 of 37 infections, including 11 of 13 respiratory tract infections, all 7 urinary tract infections, all 12 skin and soft tissue infections, 1 of 2 bone and joint infections, a catheter-related septicemia, a liver abscess, and an otitis media and externa. Favorable bacteriological responses were seen for 48 of 58 organisms. This included 6 of 7 Staphylococcus aureus strains, 14 of 16 other aerobic gram-positive cocci, 18 of 20 Enterobacteriaceae, 6 of 9 Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and 1 of 2 anaerobes. Peak plasma ceftriaxone levels on day 1 were 152 micrograms/ml by bioassay and 78 micrograms/ml by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Four of the 31 initial isolates of aerobic gram-negative rods developed resistance to ceftriaxone on disk diffusion testing. Diarrhea occurred in 3 of 50 patients. All three had received a higher than usual dose. Drug administration was stopped twice, once for a thrombocytopenia and once for a thrombocytopenia with leukopenia. Neither problem could be attributed exclusively to ceftriaxone. Other adverse reactions were eosinophilia,
abdominal pain
, inguinal
candidiasis
, and nonsuppurative phlebitis. Even among debilitated adults, ceftriaxone was safe and effective in a twice daily regimen.
...
PMID:Ceftriaxone therapy of serious bacterial infections in adults. 630 65
Nineteen patients with fungal splenic abscesses included 16 with leukemia, one drug user, one patient with Cushing's syndrome, and one without predisposing causes. Fifteen had persistent fever; six had esophageal or mucocutaneous
candidiasis
.
Abdominal pain
occurred in seven patients, splenomegaly occurred in six, and left abdominal mass occurred in one. Three chest x-ray films showed left pleural effusions; two had elevated left hemidiaphragms, two had left-sided infiltrates, and one was normal. Sixteen of 17 technetium Tc 99m sulfur colloid scans were abnormal, as were 15 gallium citrate Ga 67 scans. Two computed tomographic studies revealed splenic defects. Candida was the cause in 15 cases, Aspergillus was the cause in three cases, and Blastomyces dermatitidis was the cause in one case. Sixteen patients underwent splenectomy, 12 receiving postoperative antifungal therapy. Fifteen survived regardless of underlying disease or hepatic microabscesses.
...
PMID:Fungal splenic abscess. 638 95
Seven patients with acute leukemia and systemic candidiasis presented with a clinical syndrome of fever,
abdominal pain
, organomegaly, and a cholestatic pattern of hepatic dysfunction with an elevated alkaline phosphatase and normal transaminases. The abdominal CT scan demonstrated diffuse hepatic and splenic abscesses in all seven patients. Culture and histology of liver biopsy specimens was nondiagnostic in four of five cases. The CT-directed percutaneous needle aspirations of these lesions yielded diagnostic material in two of three cases. Culture-negative visceral abscesses in persistently febrile patients with acute leukemia should be recognized as being due to
candidiasis
. The abdominal CT scan may be useful in identifying this clinical-radiographic syndrome and in facilitating rapid diagnosis. Promptly administered antifungal therapy may lead to successful eradication of this infection.
...
PMID:Computerized tomography in the diagnosis of systemic candidiasis in patients with acute leukemia. 650 58
In an open multicentre study the efficacy and safety of fluconazole versus ketoconazole were evaluated in the treatment of 46 pediatric patients with oropharyngeal
candidiasis
and AIDS or HIV infection. Twenty-four subjects received oral fluconazole in a dosage of 3 mg/kg/day and 22 subjects received oral ketoconazole in a dosage of 7 mg/kg/day. The treatment duration ranged from 5 to 49 days. Results showed that fluconazole and ketoconazole have comparable efficacy and safety in the treatment of oropharyngeal
candidiasis
in HIV-infected children. Patients treated with fluconazole had higher clinical and mycological cure rates at the end of therapy (88% and 71% respectively) than those treated with ketoconazole (81% and 57% respectively). One case of drug-related side effects (diarrhea and
abdominal pain
) in a patient receiving ketoconazole resulted in discontinuation of treatment. Follow-up examinations 2 and 4 weeks post-treatment showed a comparably high rate of relapse in both patient groups.
...
PMID:Fluconazole versus ketoconazole in the treatment of oropharyngeal candidiasis in HIV-infected children. Multicentre Study Group. 807 Apr 43
Since fluconazole achieves high urine concentrations, we assessed its usefulness in the treatment of urinary
candidiasis
. We studied 24 patients (8 male) aged 23 to 97 years old, that presented pyuria with a negative urine culture for bacteria and fungal colony counts in urine of 10(4) CFU/ml or more. Isolated strains were Candida albicans in 20 cases, Candida kefyr in one case, Candida glabrata in one case and Candida spp in two cases. All patients were treated with fluconazole in doses of 50 to 100 mg/day for 2 to 4 weeks. The fungus was eradicated in 21 patients (88%), the infection persisted in two (8.5%) and one had a relapse (4.2%). Two patients had transient elevations of transaminases, one had
abdominal pain
and one, a purpuric syndrome without thrombocytopenia in whom the drug was discontinued. It is concluded that fluconazole is efficacious and safe in the treatment of urinary
candidiasis
.
...
PMID:[Fluconazole in treatment of urinary candidiasis. Experience with 24 patients]. 873 68
We describe the clinical and pathologic features of a hitherto unreported finding in patients with esophagitis: the presence of multinucleated squamous epithelial giant cells simulating viral cytopathic effect and/or dysplasia. Routinely processed hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained slides of esophageal mucosal biopsies from 14 patients with both active esophagitis and multinucleated epithelial giant cells were evaluated for a variety of inflammatory and epithelial features. Clinical, endoscopic, and follow-up data were collected and correlated with the histologic findings. Immunostaining (ABC method) for cytokeratin AE1/AE3, S-100, MIB-1, herpes simplex virus 1 and 2 (HSV), cytomegalovirus (CMV), as well as DNA in situ hybridization for human papilloma virus (HPV-ISH) was performed in all cases. Electron microscopic evaluation for viral particles was performed in three cases. The study group consisted of nine men and five women (mean age 59 years; range 23-87 years; 12 white, one black, one Hispanic). Patients presented with dysphagia or odynophagia (n = 5), upper gastrointestinal bleeding (n = 5), heartburn (n = 2), or
abdominal pain
(n = 2). The etiology of esophagitis was attributed to gastroesophageal reflux in 10, radiotherapy in one,
Candida infection
in one, drug-induced (alendronate) in one, and unknown in 1. Endoscopically, seven patients had an ulcer or erosion, four erythema, two stricture formation, and one white mucosal plaques. Microscopically, all cases showed multiple multinucleated (mean three nuclei per cell, range two to nine) squamous epithelial cells (range 2 to 11 cells per biopsy) confined to the basal zone in nine of 14 cases and involving the basal and superficial epithelium in the remainder. The nuclei contained a single or multiple eosinophilic nucleoli with a perinucleolar halo, but no inclusions, hyperchromaticity, or atypical mitoses. All cases showed associated nonspecific features of active esophagitis such as ulceration, neutrophilic and eosinophilic inflammation, basal cell hyperplasia, and elongation of the lamina propria papillae. The multinucleated giant cells, in all cases, were strongly positive for cytokeratin AE1/AE3 and were negative for S-100, HSV I and II, CMV, and HPV-ISH. MIB-1 positivity was observed in all basally located multinucleated giant cells, whereas those in the more superficial layers were negative. Electron microscopy failed to show viral particles in three of three cases. After treatment, all patients demonstrated clinical improvement. Three patients in whom follow-up biopsies were performed showed no evidence of esophagitis, epithelial cell multinucleation, or dysplasia. Multinucleated epithelial giant cell changes may rarely be seen in patients with esophagitis of varying etiology and probably represent a regenerative response to injury. This feature is important to distinguish from either viral cytopathic effect or dysplasia.
...
PMID:Multinucleated epithelial giant cell changes in esophagitis: a clinicopathologic study of 14 cases. 942 21
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