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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 37 children with Campylobacter enteritis seen over a 6-month period, ages ranged from 2 weeks to 15 years. The sex ratio (male:female) was three:two. Fever, diarrhea, and bloody stools occurred in about 90% of patients. Blood appeared in the stools characteristically 2 to 4 days after onset of symptoms. Over 90% of older children developed
abdominal pain
. Vomiting was mild and occurred in 30% of patients. Dehydration was not a feature.
Infection
occurred in all social classes and was not associated with parental occupation, travel, or animal contact. The illness often presented characteristically and a rapid laboratory diagnosis could be made in patients presenting acutely by direct phase-contrast microscopy of stools. The organism persisted in the stools for up to seven weeks in untreated patients, but could no longer be cultured after 48 hours of therapy with erythromycin, to which all strains were highly sensitive. Significant serologic responses were elicited using a serum bactericidal assay. The Skirrow-type selective medium used by us could be improved by increasing the concentration of polymyxin B sulfate to 5 microgram/ml.
...
PMID:Campylobacter enteritis in children. 43 Feb 87
Campylobacter jejuni/coli has recently become recognized as a common bacterial cause of diarrhea.
Infection
can occur at any age. The usual incubation period of campylobacter enteritis is 2 to 5 days. Fever, diarrhea and
abdominal pain
are the most common clinical features. The stools frequently contain mucus and, a few days after the onset of symptoms, frank blood. Significant vomiting and dehydration are uncommon. A rapid presumptive laboratory diagnosis may be made during the acute phase of the illness by direct phase-contrast microscopy of stools. Isolation of the organism from stools requires culture in a selective medium containing antibiotics and incubation under reduced oxygen tension at 42 degrees C. The organism persists in the stools of untreated patients for up to 7 weeks following the onset of symptoms. Erythromycin may produce a rapid clinical and bacteriologic cure, and should be used to treat moderately to severely ill patients as well as patients with compromised host defences. The emergence of erythromycin-resistant strains requires close monitoring. The epidemiologic aspects of campylobacter enteritis will be fully understood only when methods become available for differentiating strains of C. jejuni/coli. The historical background and current knowledge of campylobacter enteritis are reviewed in this paper.
...
PMID:Campylobacter enteritis. 45 9
Amebiasis, that is, infection with Entameba histolytica, continues to be endemic in the United States, with liver abscess occurring as an infrequent but constant complication. Seven cases are reported, with epidemiologic investigation of two. Reliable findings in hepatic abscess include fever,
abdominal pain
, respiratory distress, tender abdomen, and large, tender liver. Anemia, elevated white count with left shift, and the radiographic findings of an elevated right hemidiaphragm are constant. Epidemiologically, amebiasis occurs in clusters in the United States with person-to-person transmission predominant in spread.
Infection
is associated with poor sanitation and crowding. Investigation of the families of two patients documented 9/21 carriers and an additional 3/21 who were seropositive, as well as crowding and poor sanitation. In this country, treatment of a patient with amebic disease should include investigation of his home and family.
...
PMID:Amebic liver abscess in children: clinical and epidemiologic features. 51 19
During the first eight months of 1978, 26 patients were admitted to the
Communicable Diseases
Unit at King's Cross Hospital, Dundee with a diagnosis of campylobacter enteritis. The variety of clinical features encountered is described. Although diarrhoea occurred in all cases, it was preceded or accompanied by
abdominal pain
in the majority of cases and by fever in over half of the patients. The article emphasises the need to consider campylobacter infection in patients presenting with bloody diarrhoea, acute abdominal pain or pyrexias of unknown origin.
...
PMID:Campylobacter enteritis-an in-patient study. 55 17
Giardia lamblia has a cosmopolitan distribution. The organism exists in two stages--the trophozoite and the cystic stage. Infected children may have acute or chronic diarrhea, crampy
abdominal pain
, anorexia, malasorption and poor weight gain and may be misdiagnosed as celiac disease.
Infection
may be selflimited or chronic even over years. Diagnosis is usually made by finding the characteristic cyst in stool specimens or by duodenal aspiration. Histological sections and impression smears (AMENT) of intestinal mucosa biopsies have been proved to be the most reliable method for detecting giardiasis. Evaluation of impression smears for parasites is easier and quicker than examining serial sections of biopsies. Out of 175 selected patients with intestinal complaints which were undergone small intestinal biopsy 11 were infected with giardia lamblia (6.2%). All infected children were symptomatic, malabsorption could be demonstrated in 5/8, lactase levels were reduced in most children. Examination of duodenal aspirates, stool specimens and histological sections (routine histology) alone would not have been diagnostic in every case. Evaluation of impression smears proved to be a reliable method in detecting giardia lamblia infection and is recommended whenever an intestinal biopsy is performed.
...
PMID:[The value of the "impression smear" in detecting giardia lamblia infection (author's transl)]. 64 94
This is the first published report in Israel of ischemic colitis in a woman using the contraceptive pill; 20 such cases have been reported in other parts of the world. The patient was a 46 year old married woman with 3 children; she had been in good health except for obesity and chronic hypertension. Her medications included an oral contraceptive for a period of 3 years, and methyldopa for treatment of her hypertension. She presented with
abdominal pain
and diarrhea of 5 weeks duration. She underwent surgical reanastamosis of the bowel and was doing well at follow-up 1 year after surgery. The presence of ischemic colitis was definitively diagnosed by histological examination; the differential diagnosis included cancer, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, and
infectious disease
. The authors note that although there is possible association between taking oral contraceptives and the appearance of ischemic colitis, there is not yet any statistical evidence for such a relationship. Similar cases have been reported among young women who were not using oral contraceptives.
...
PMID:[Ischemic colitis in a woman on contraceptive pills]. 84 35
A 66-year-old man suffering from high fever and
abdominal pain
was diagnosed as abdominal aortic pseudoaneurysm due to Salmonella enteritidis septicemia. After complete remission of infection with the antibiotic therapy, we performed a replacement of abdominal aorta with a prosthetic graft.
Infection
parameters are normal 5 months postoperatively. Although Salmonella septicemia is a serious disorder, it is not a rare infection recently as compromised host increases more. Rapid diagnosis, adequate antibiotic therapy and surgical treatment are essential for successful result of Salmonella aortic aneurysm.
...
PMID:[A case of abdominal aortic pseudoaneurysm due to Salmonella enteritidis septicemia]. 155 94
An outbreak of severe haemorrhagic illness began in the municipality of Guanarito, Portuguesa State, Venezuela, in September, 1989. Subsequent detailed study of 15 cases confirmed the presence of a new viral disease, designated Venezuelan haemorrhagic fever. Characteristic features are fever, toxicity, headache, arthralgia, diarrhoea, conjunctivitis, pharyngitis, leucopenia, thrombocytopenia, and haemorrhagic manifestations. Other features include facial oedema, cervical lymphadenopathy, nausea/vomiting, cough, chest or
abdominal pain
, and convulsions. The patients ranged in age from 6 to 54 years; all were residents of rural areas in central Venezuela, and 9 died.
Infection
with Guanarito virus, a newly recognised arenavirus, was shown by direct culture or by serological confirmation in all cases. Epidemiological studies suggest that the disease is endemic in some rural areas of central Venezuela and that it is rodent-borne. Venezuelan haemorrhagic fever has many similarities to Lassa fever and to the arenavirus haemorrhagic fevers that occur in Argentina and Bolivia.
...
PMID:Venezuelan haemorrhagic fever. 168 54
The case of a 31 year old man who had been intravenous drug abuser for years is reported. He was studied because of
abdominal pain
, jaundice, a weight loss of 10 kg, and the presence of a subclavicular mass. Biopsy of the mass demonstrated a high-grade B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and the patient was classified in group IV-D of the human immunodeficiency virus infection because he had HIV serum antibodies and a reduced CD4/CD8 lymphocyte ratio. Although lymphoma had a good response to chemotherapy, persistent cholestasis led to liver and biliary evaluation. Sclerosing cholangitis and papillary stenosis were found. He has been followed for two years, without evidence of any secondary
infectious disease
associated to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:[Sclerosing cholangitis, papillary stenosis and B-cell lymphoma in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 189 85
Five years case record of a 18 year old man is reported. Because of sustained diarrhea he was treated several times on departments for
infectious diseases
. The patient was operated on three times in various surgical departments because of vigorous
abdominal pain
, cachexia and CT scan finding. In addition extraintestinal complications and symptoms delayed the diagnosis. The diagnosis was verified by the H2 breath test and microbiological examination of intestinal juice. Complaints of patient ceaset after sustained Ciprobay therapy. The severe deficiency symptoms were relieved by complex substitution.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic and therapeutic problems in a severe case of bacterial contamination of the small intestine]. 200 37
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