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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twelve patients with liver disease related to methyldopa were seen between 1967 and 1977. Illness occurred within 1--9 weeks of commencement of therapy in 9 patients, the remaining 3 patients having received the drug for 13 months, 15 months and 7 years before experiencing symptoms. Jaundice with tender hepatomegaly, usually preceded by symptoms of malaise, anorexia, nausea and vomiting, and associated with upper
abdominal pain
, was an invariable finding in all patients. Biochemical liver function tests indicated hepatocellular necrosis and correlated with histopathological evidence of hepatic injury, the spectrum of which ranged from fatty change and focal hepatocellular necrosis to massive hepatic necrosis. Most patients showed moderate to severe acute hepatitis or chronic active hepatitis with associated
cholestasis
. The drug was withdrawn on presentation to hospital in 11 patients, with rapid clinical improvement in 9. One patient died, having presented in hepatic failure, and another, who had been taking methyldopa for 7 years, showed slower clinical and biochemical resolution over a period of several months. The remaining patient in the series developed fulminant hepatitis when the drug was accidentally recommenced 1 year after a prior episode of methyldopa-induced hepatitis. In this latter patient, and in 2 others, the causal relationship between methyldopa and hepatic dysfunction was proved with the recurrence of hepatitis within 2 weeks of re-exposure to the drug.
...
PMID:Patterns of hepatic injury induced by methyldopa. 42 37
A 52-year-old Caucasian female developed
abdominal pain
, fever, and jaundice after erythromycin ethylsuccinate administration. Similar symptoms followed the administration of the same drug 5 mo earlier. It is believed that this is the first published case of erythromycin ethylsuccinate-induced
cholestasis
.
...
PMID:Erythromycin ethylsuccinate-induced cholestasis. 43 4
There have been only two reports of severe hepatotoxic reaction caused by meglumine iodipamide. Lately we experienced such a reaction in an 66-year old female with chronic intrahepatic
cholestasis
. After drip infusion cholangiography was performed by infusing 40 ml. of 50% meglumine iodipamide (Biligrafin) intravenously, the patient developed nausea and
abdominal pain
. Her serum transaminase rose to more than 2,000 K-A units on the third day and gradually returned to normal by the 18th day. The macrophage migration inhibition test of her blood was positive for meglumine iodipamide. Accordingly some delayed type of hypersensitivity in the above reaction could be considered. When a larger amount than a recommended dose of meglumine iodipamide is infused in cholangiography, a severe hepatotoxic reaction might be induced, especially in icteric cases.
...
PMID:A case of meglumine iodipamide hepatotoxicity. 46 51
8 patients with carcinoma of the hepatic duct are presented. Despite symptoms during the long anicteric period (2-13 months, x 15 months) the diagnosis was never established until the patients became jaundiced. Early in the course of the diseases all of them reported upper
abdominal pain
and intermittend diarrhea, and the test for occult blood in the stool was positive. Initially there may be no biochemical evidence of
cholestasis
. Liver biopsy may at an early stage reveal pseudoxanthoma cells as an index of long-lived, local mechanical
cholestasis
.
...
PMID:[Early diagnosis of hepatic duct carcinoma]. 85 24
In AIDS patients an acalculous cholecystitis may be responsible for
abdominal pain
subsiding after cholecystectomy. But the indications for cholecystectomy are not clear: cholecystitis is usually associated with diffuse cholangitis and this might cause the symptoms. Since 1985, 8 AIDS patients have undergone cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis. Ultrasonography revealed a 5 to 12 mm thickening of the gallbladder wall in all of them and gallbladder stones in two; four patients had cholangitis. The decision to operate was based on persistent pain associated with fever, poor general condition and muscular rigidity at palpation. Four patients had septic shock at the time of surgery; one died in the immediate postoperative period. In all other patients pain and septic syndrome subsided. Two patients died of AIDS complications 20 days after surgery; the remaining five died of AIDS 6, 9, 10, 12 and 14 months respectively after surgery; in two of them
cholestasis
had reappeared due to cholangitis. To summarize, in the 8 AIDS patients studied cholecystectomy was performed for clinical deterioration. Gallbladder pathology was responsible for the
abdominal pain
and the febrile general condition which was relieved by cholecystectomy.
...
PMID:[Hepatobiliary manifestations in AIDS in adults. Place of cholecystectomy]. 129
A 15-year old Black teenager came to a clinic at the University of Alabama's School of Medicine in Tuscaloosa requesting oral contraceptives (OCs). The physical examination indicated that she was in good health and the physician prescribed an OC (1 mg norethindrone and .035 mg ethinyl estradiol). 21 months later she returned complaining of yellow eyes for 3 weeks. The oral mucosa was also jaundiced. She had considerably high levels of bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase. She had no hepatitis virus antibodies. 5 months later she returned for the physical examination required to renew the OC prescription. She did not have jaundice at this time. 10 months later she complained of malaise and muscular pain. Her alkaline phosphatase level was high, but her bilirubin level was normal. She had mild hepatosplenomegaly without focal defects. After reviewing her medical records, the physician diagnosed intrahepatic
cholestasis
and discontinued her OC prescription. Liver function tests were normal within 3 months. 14 months later, she returned complaining of malaise and reported taking OCs obtained at another clinic 3 months earlier. The physician advised her about the complications of OCs and about other contraceptive methods. The same physician also examined a 32-year-old Black woman who had intermittent epigastric and right-upper quadrant
abdominal pain
for 2 weeks. Eating worsened the pain, which lasted for up to 15 minutes. She had used an OC for 12 years. Ultrasound revealed a 4.2 cm hypoechoic mass in the left upper lobe of the liver. The physician discontinued the OCs. The tumor regressed over 12 months. Active liver disease is a contraindication to OC use. Women who had cholestatic jaundice while pregnant or have first degree relatives with cholestatic jaundice of pregnancy should not use OCs. Physicians may introduce OCs to closely monitored women with a history of liver disease whose liver function tests are normal. Women with a family history of biliary excretion defects should not use OCs.
...
PMID:Hepatobiliary complications of oral contraceptives. 133 97
To assess the role of Tc-99m IDA cholescintigraphy in diagnosing bile leakage and
bile obstruction
after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, 51 studies were performed in 51 patients on the first postoperative day. Two different radioactive bile acid analogs were used, Tc-99m HIDA and Tc-99m trimethylbromo IDA. Scintigraphic findings were correlated with the clinical conditions. Results of seven out of 51 cholescintigrams were abnormal, showing accumulations of activity in the right paracolic gutter. Of these seven patients, only three had clinical symptoms consisting of more than normal postoperative
abdominal pain
and peritoneal irritation. The other four patients had minimal abnormal accumulation in the right paracolic gutter and showed no clinical signs postoperatively. Complete common
bile duct obstruction
or other bile duct-related complications, except for bile leakage, were not observed. Cholescintigraphy is feasible for the early detection of bile leakage and bile flow obstruction after laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients with increased postoperative abdominal discomfort.
...
PMID:Scintigraphic diagnosis of bile leakage after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. A prospective study. 139 39
We studied the reliability of the clinical assessment and the discriminatory value of different symptoms and signs in diagnosing obstructive and non-obstructive diseases causing icterus and/or
cholestasis
. During a period of two-and-a-half years, clinical assessment done by both physicians-in-training and by senior physicians was completed for 266 patients, and the usefulness of different symptoms and signs was tested in 220 of these. Clinical assessment was found to be a reliable method in distinguishing between obstructive and non-obstructive conditions causing icterus, with the sensitivity of 92% and specificity of 86%. In cases of anicteric
cholestasis
, the sensitivity and specificity of clinical assessment were 74% and 80%, respectively.
Abdominal pain
and abdominal tenderness were significantly (p less than 0.01) associated with obstructive diseases, whereas an enlarged liver, fever and excessive consumption of alcohol were associated with non-obstructive diseases (p less than 0.01, p less than 0.05, p less than 0.05, respectively). Itching, vomiting, intolerance to fatty foods, previous cholecystectomy, abdominal tumour and clinical icterus had no discriminatory value. Clinical evaluation is a reliable method in the diagnostic workup of a patient with icterus or anicteric
cholestasis
, and it is still of crucial importance in directing further investigations.
...
PMID:The value of clinical assessment in the diagnosis of icterus and cholestasis. 151 56
We have reported 28 cases of pediatric cholelithiasis in our hospital between 1980 and 1990. We found risk factors in 15 of these cases (53.6%). The most frequent risk factors were hereditary spherocytosis,
cholestasis
and obesity. A high frequency of non-hemolytic cholelithiasis was noted. Lithiasis was a casual finding in 13 cases (46.4%). The most frequent symptom was nonspecific
abdominal pain
, which occurred in 8 patients. Diagnosis was made with echography in every case. The range of time in which the patients were followed ranged between 1-5 years. Eight children required surgery. Among the other twenty, twelve were asymptomatic and six improved spontaneously. The mean age at the moment of diagnosis was younger in the children that spontaneously recovered than in children with permanent lithiasis. Therefore, for this reason, we recommend an observation period before surgery in children younger than 3 years of age.
...
PMID:[Biliary lithiasis in childhood]. 160 11
Between 1978 and 1991 a total of 136 operations with the laparoscope have been performed. 79 additional laparoscopies were carried out for diagnostic purposes. The most frequent indications for operative laparoscopy were: adhesions, abdominal cysts, tumors, gonadectomy, appendectomy and cholecystectomy. Diagnostic laparoscopies were performed for the differential diagnosis of
cholestasis
, chronic
abdominal pain
, intersex and cryptorchidism. The only complication was a scar hernia in a 1,400 gram preterm baby. We recommend laparoscopy because of its smaller trauma and the reduced postoperative complication rate. Furthermore, an advantage is the magnification by the lupes and video, the excellent illumination and exposure.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic surgery in neonates and infants. 167 99
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