Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 44-year-old woman with chronic abdominal pain and weight loss is presented. 1 year after onset of symptoms and following multiple diagnostic procedures, angiography revealed high grade stenosis of the celiac and superior mesenteric arteries at their origins. Bypass grafts of Goretex were implanted from the infrarenal aorta to both arteries beyond the narrowed segments. 1 year after surgery the patient has regained her weight and is feeling well.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of chronic mesenteric ischemia]. 274 46

We report a case of subacute pancreatitis in a 26-year-old woman, who underwent partial pancreatectomy after a two-week history of abdominal pain. The patient had a long history of allergy. She did not show any well recognized cause of acute or chronic pancreatitis. This patient was thought to have eosinophilic pancreatitis because of the presence of a prominent eosinophilic infiltrate in the resected pancreas. Eosinophilic infiltration of the pancreas has been reported very rarely in the literature, and is usually associated with more generalized disease. In our case there was no extrapancreatic involvement, as shown by repeatedly normal blood eosinophil counts, and by histologically normal spleen, celiac lymph nodes, and gastroduodenal biopsies. We suggest that an allergic mechanism might be responsible for this patient's disease, based on past history of allergic manifestations and the important increase in her serum IgE.
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PMID:[Eosinophilic pancreatitis: a rare manifestation of digestive allergy?]. 280 7

Acidosis in gastric mucosa (pHi less than 7.32) was evaluated as a diagnostic test for gastric ischemia, using 80 asymptomatic subjects as controls. Mucosal acidosis was found in 6 patients with abdominal pain and 1 with gastrointestinal bleeding. Three had occlusive disease of 2 or more visceral arteries, 3 had occlusive disease of the celiac axis alone, and 1 had an occluded portal vein. One patient had infarcted gut. The abnormal pHi (7.10 +/- 0.11, mean +/- SD) in those with pain was returned to normal levels (7.43 +/- 0.08, p = 0.0003) and the symptoms relieved by revascularization. The abnormal pHi (6.84 +/- .04) in the patient who bled was restored to normal levels (7.48 +/- .03, t = 9.69, p less than .0001) and the bleeding stopped by a central splenorenal shunt. Measurements of pHi in gastrointestinal mucosa may be used as an objective test for evaluating patients suspected of having chronic gastrointestinal ischemia.
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PMID:Chronic gastric ischemia. A cause of abdominal pain or bleeding identified from the presence of gastric mucosal acidosis. 280 10

A patient with intractable abdominal pain due to chronic pancreatitis was successfully treated by direct electrical stimulation of the celiac plexus. The details of the procedure are presented. This simple innocuous technique could be of value in treating patients with pain due to chronic pancreatitis who would otherwise have a near normal life expectancy. Also, it can be used in patients suffering from cancer of the pancreas and upper abdominal viscera.
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PMID:Electrical stimulation of the celiac plexus for pain relief in chronic pancreatitis. A clinical note. 287 14

A case of malignant somatostatinoma is reported in a patient with long-standing dermatitis herpetiformis and coeliac disease. The patient had non-specific abdominal pain of several years duration and came to attention because of weight loss despite strict adherence to a gluten-free diet. Plasma somatostatin levels were raised, and laparotomy showed a pancreatic tumour with metastases, which on histology, electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry proved to be a somatostatinoma. After a promising initial response to streptozotocin, she died 30 months later. This is the first reported occurrence of a somatostatinoma in a patient with coeliac disease, adding to the growing list of neoplastic complications in this condition.
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PMID:Malignant pancreatic somatostatinoma in a patient with dermatitis herpetiformis and coeliac disease. 289 27

A 63 year old Japanese man was admitted in Feb. 1983, with his chief complaint of upper abdominal pain. Physical examination showed only resistance in the right hypochondrium on palpation, but no icteric conjunctiva and skin. A large global tumor of the pancreas head was visualised as a hyperechoic mass with irregularly shaped cystic cavity in ultrasonography, as a hypervascular mass with lucent area in celiac arteriography, and as a mass lesion with low density area in body computerized tomography. Cancer cells were histologically confirmed on specimens taken by fine needle aspiration biopsy under ultrasonic guidance. Cancer of 6.5 X 6.0 X 4.0 cm in size was resected by pancreaticoduodenectomy. Four months after operation, two liver metastatic nodules were resected by right hepatic lobectomy. Histologically, tumor was composed of two characteristic patterns, acinar cell cancer and duct cell cancer, which were confirmed by immunohistochemical techniques. The patient is doing well 3 years and 3 months postoperatively without evidence of recurrent cancer. To our best knowledge, this case is the seventh of mixed ductal and acinar cancer in the world, but the previous 6 cases were reported on autopsy specimens.
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PMID:[Mixed ductal and acinar cell cancer of the pancreas head; report of a case]. 304 Nov 98

The authors report their experience in the study of bleeding aneurysms of the celiac arteries. Eleven patients were examined with US, CT, and angiography (8 hepatic artery aneurysms and 3 splenic artery aneurysms). Clinical findings included digestive bleeding, upper abdominal pain, palpable pulsating masses, and jaundice. Patient history included blunt abdominal trauma, penetrating trauma due to gunshot, acute pancreatitis, recent hepatic biopsy. In all cases US showed an abdominal mass ranging in size from 2 to 10 cm. US findings included cyst-like lesions (8 cases), a lobulated solid-like lesion, and complex lesions (2 cases). Continuity of the lesion with adjacent arterial vessels was noted in 5/11 cases, and pulsing activity in 3/11 cases. US patterns, although not specific, play an important role in the diagnosis when associated to other elements such as arterial continuity, mass pulsatility, patient history, and gastrointestinal bleeding. They suggest the need for more specific imaging exams, i.e. CT and angiography, and help avoid dangerous diagnostic biopsies. CT was performed to confirm US findings in 5 cases, and detected either hypodense cystic masses, or inhomogeneous masses with arterial enhancement after bolus injection of cm. CT was used to better demonstrate the lumen, patency of the vessel, the walls of the vessel, and the parietal thrombotic component. The typical arterial enhancement was the decisive finding for the diagnosis, even though a total continuity with arterial vessels was never observed. Angiography was the method of choice for the preoperative demonstration of hepatic artery aneurysms (10 cases) and for occlusive treatment with Gianturco coils (3 cases).
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PMID:[Hemorrhagic aneurysm of the celiac trunk. Diagnosis by ultrasound, CT and angiography]. 305 77

This paper describes a new approach to the neurolytic block of the celiac plexus through the anterior abdominal wall using CT guidance. In 5 patients, CT guidance was used for needle placement and visualization of the spread of the injection. Once the pain has been relieved on completion of the neurolytic block, the radiologist proceeds with the biopsy. Pain relief was obtained in 80% of the cases after 2 weeks and in 60% after 6 months. No serious complications were observed. The anterior approach is simple and is useful in those patients with upper chronic abdominal pain scheduled for biopsy of the pancreas, and in those terminally ill patients who cannot tolerate the prone position.
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PMID:The percutaneous anterior approach to the celiac plexus using CT guidance. 318 76

To further understand the pathophysiology of arterial diseases induced by oral contraceptives (OCs), a case report is presented of a young woman who died of extensive visceral artery thrombosis. The possible role of estrogens and progestogens and of cigarette smoking as the predisposing factors in this patient are discussed. A 26-year-old woman, who complained of progressive abdominal pain and whose past medical and surgical history was negative, was admitted to the general surgery service. She was the mother of 1 child and had had 2 previous spontaneous abortions. She had received ethinyl estradiol 35 mcg with norethindrone 500 mcg and 1000 mcg for 3 months, but because of a problem with breakthrough bleeding the medication was changed to mestranol 50 mcg with norethindrone 1000 mcg. She had been taking Ortho-Novum 1/50 for 2 1/2 years. She had smoked 25-35 cigarettes daily for about 10 years but denied use of alcohol or other drugs. She was not known to be diabetic, hypertensive, or dyslipidemic, and had no history of atherosclerosis in her family. For 7 months prior to her admission, the patient complained of abdominal pain, which progressively increased in intensity and duration, interrupted by periods of well-being. The patient reported 2 recent, isolated episodes of mild proctalgia but no tenesmus or melena. There had been no fever, but the patient had been anorexic for the past 2 weeks and reported losing 10 kg in the past month. She had no complaints apart from those related to the gastrointestinal system. At an emergency laparotomy, gangrenous acalculous cholecystitis and infarction of the terminal ileum were discovered. A cholecystectomy with resection of the terminal ileum and the right colon was performed. An end-to-end primary anastomosis was performed. On exploration of the superior mesenteric artery, a thrombus was discovered at its origin. As a transverse arteriotomy showed a good retrograde flow, a thrombectomy was performed. There appeared to be an unsatisfactory antegrade flow. The superior mesenteric artery then was transposed in an end-to-end fashion on the abdominal aorta. An immediate postoperative arteriogram showed thrombosis of the celiac axis at its origin. Revascularization failed to improve the condition of the intestine. The patient died. The intent of this case report is to emphasize that the association between smoking and oral contraceptives can cause cardiovascular disease in young women, and a failure to recognize this association can result in delayed diagnosis and worsen the prognosis.
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PMID:Intimal hyperplasia and thrombosis of the visceral arteries in a young woman: possible relation with oral contraceptives and smoking. 337 98

Five children with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and unusual gastrointestinal disease are described. Two children presented with malnutrition, abdominal distention, and diarrhea. One was found to have moderately severe villus atrophy on jejunal biopsy and was initially thought to have celiac disease. Jejunal biopsy from the second child revealed infiltration of the mucosa with acid-fast bacilli-laden macrophages. A third child suffered recurrent abdominal pain, progressive weight loss, diarrhea, and severe gastrointestinal hemorrhage secondary to infection with cytomegalovirus. Pseudomembranous necrotizing jejunitis associated with overgrowth of Klebsiella pneumoniae in the duodenal fluid occurred in one patient. The fifth child presented in the newborn period with Serratia marcescens cholecystitis. Gastrointestinal disease in children with AIDS may be due to idiopathic villus atrophy and bacterial or opportunistic infection.
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PMID:Severe gastrointestinal involvement in children with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 343 Feb 58


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