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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors describe the course of
Crohn's disease
in two boys and six girls aged 11.1-15.6 years. In three patients with terminal ileitis and affection of the ascendent colon the disease is characterized by prolonged growth retardation, subfebrile temperatures,
abdominal pain
. For patients with granulomatous colitis, blood-stained diarrhoea is typical
abdominal pain
and loss of body weight. Three patients were treated first for idiopathic proctocolitis and only in the course of the disease the diagnosis of
Crohn's disease
was established. In 87.5% of the patients on admission anaemia was found and all patients had a varying elevated red cell sedimentation rate and CRP. The author draws attention to extraintestinal symptoms (dermal, ophthalmological, articular, somatic retardation) which precede in particular somatic retardation) which precede in particular in affections of the small intestine intestinal manifestations. Their erroneous interpretation may delay the establishment of the diagnosis of
Crohn's disease
. The author emphasizes the importance of basic laboratory examinations and examination by ultrasound for early detection of patients.
...
PMID:[Clinical picture of Crohn's disease in children and adolescents]. 224 75
Crohn's disease
is less prevalent in blacks than in whites. However, when it does occur, it is associated with a high degree of morbidity and is frequently unrecognized at initial presentation. Forty-three patients with
Crohn's disease
presented to Howard University Hospital between 1965 and 1987. There were 156 hospital admissions, 47 emergency room visits, and 76 clinic visits over this 22-year period. Twenty-eight patients were female and 15 were male. The age of presentation for males ranged from 18 to 63 years and for females, 12 to 74 years.
Crohn's disease
should be considered in black patients who present with chronic
abdominal pain
and diarrhea. With correct diagnosis and appropriate medical therapy, patients should have an enhanced quality of life with less morbidity.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease in black patients. 228 Apr 20
The effect of prednisolone (20-30 mg daily for six to nine weeks) was studied in eight patients with
Crohn's disease
and recurrent, preanastomotic ileal inflammation, in respect of symptoms, endoscopic findings and phospholipase A2 activity in the ileal mucosa. The Harvey-Bradshaw
Crohn's disease
activity index improved significantly, mainly because of reduced frequency of loose stools and diminution of
abdominal pain
. Endoscopy revealed no corresponding decrease in ileal inflammation, which in all cases persisted after treatment. The phospholipase A2 activity in the ileal mucosa was not altered by prednisolone. In two of three patients with concomitant colitis colonic inflammation improved. The study confirmed earlier reports of good symptomatic relief from glucocorticoid treatment in
Crohn's disease
of the small bowel, but endoscopy suggests that this improvement was not the result of resolution of small intestinal mucosal inflammation.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoid treatment in ileal Crohn's disease: relief of symptoms but not of endoscopically viewed inflammation. 232 98
The authors retrospectively reviewed the records of 50 patients whose initial diagnosis of
Crohn's disease
was made after the age of 50 years on the basis of strict histopathologic criteria. Progress of the 32 women and 18 men with a median age of 60 years (range, 50 to 78 years) was followed for a median of 95.5 months (range, 81.1 to 236.6 months). The most common presenting signs and symptoms were
abdominal pain
(82 percent), diarrhea (70 percent), weight loss (56 percent), bleeding from the gastrointestinal tract (26 percent), abdominal mass (16 percent), and fistula (14 percent). Initial operations performed were ileocolic resection (38 percent), proctocolectomy (16 percent), small bowel resection (10 percent), colostomy (2 percent), and a variety of segmental resections of the colon (34 percent). The overall recurrence rate of disease in patients in whom all obvious disease was resected, based on distribution of disease, was 80 percent (ileocolitis), 38 percent (ileitis), and 35 percent (colitis).
Crohn's disease
more often affects the distal gastrointestinal tract in older age groups. After resection, however, the clinical course is similar to that of the younger population. The high recurrence rate of Crohn's colitis is probably a result of the large number of initial segmental resections.
...
PMID:Clinical course of Crohn's disease in older patients. A retrospective study. 235 Sep 97
Eight patients with cystic fibrosis had chronic
abdominal pain
and the other features of distal intestinal obstruction syndrome. Coexistent abdominal pathology was shown in six patients. Two had a small bowel volvulus, and the others had
Crohn's disease
, a small bowel fistula, appendix abscess, and an ovarian dermoid. Opiate abuse exacerbated symptoms in two other patients.
...
PMID:Pathology mimicking distal intestinal obstruction syndrome in cystic fibrosis. 235 96
A 26-year-old man with a history of
Crohn's disease
was struck in the abdomen by an opponent's shoulder while playing basketball. He presented to the emergency department 3 hours later with the complaint of
abdominal pain
and was admitted to the hospital for observation. Nine hours after presentation a computed tomography scan showed he had pneumoperitoneum and then underwent laparotomy. A perforated segment of sigmoid colon with severe inflammatory disease was found and resected. The rest of his small and large bowels were otherwise unremarkable. His localized but severe inflammatory bowel disease predisposed him to bowel perforation with minimal trauma. This is the first report of a patient with inflammatory bowel disease and traumatic colon perforation; it is also the first report of a patient with a bowel perforation with minimal traumatic force.
...
PMID:Colonic perforation following mild trauma in a patient with Crohn's disease. 236 59
A 41-year-old man was hospitalized, complaining of fecaluria and right lower
abdominal pain
. He was diagnosed to have vesicorectal fistula. Wedge resection of bladder and rectum, and partial resection of ileocecal legion were performed. Pathological diagnosis was
Crohn's disease
. Postoperative course was uneventful and no recurrence was observed. Including our case, 32 cases of enterovesical fistula due to
Crohn's disease
have been reported in the Japanese literature.
...
PMID:[Vesicorectal fistula associated with Crohn's disease: a case report]. 239 62
A patient with
Crohn's disease
of the colon developed severe
abdominal pain
after salicylicazosulfapyridine and after disodium azodisalicylate therapy. Raised serum and urinary amylase levels were found after disodium azodisalicylate. Rechallenge with disodium azodisalicylate caused a recurrence of the pain and of the elevated amylase levels. The time course of these episodes was compatible with 5-aminosalicylate-induced pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis induced by disodium azodisalicylate. 245 67
A 60-year-old woman had progressive lower
abdominal pain
, nonbloody diarrhea, and weight loss, followed by severe epigastric pain and dysphagia. Radiographic evaluation of the colon showed segmental strictures which were interpreted as
Crohn's disease
. Medical treatment was not helpful. Neither gross endoscopic appearance nor multiple biopsies of the esophagus, stomach, and colon were diagnostic. Finally, laparotomy with full-thickness biopsies of the stomach and colon revealed linitis plastica. The clinician should be alert to colonic metastases from gastric linitis plastica, for it can produce focal or segmental strictures, mimicking more common colonic diseases such as
Crohn's disease
. A full-thickness biopsy is often necessary for a firm diagnosis. We review the literature on this occurrence, highlighting the clinical and radiologic spectrum, as well as the organ systems most often affected when gastric linitis plastica metastasizes.
...
PMID:Gastric linitis plastica with metastases to the colon: a mimic of Crohn's disease. 255 55
A case of severe sulfasalazine-induced hepatotoxicity is reported in a 14-year-old girl with
Crohn's disease
. Fourteen days after beginning sulfasalazine, she developed a systemic reaction characterized by high fever, maculopapular rash, lymphadenopathy,
abdominal pain
, and malaise, with tender hepatomegaly and elevated liver functions, leukemoid reaction, with eosinophilia, and immune complexes. She responded promptly to high-dose intravenous steroids with complete recovery. This case was compared to the three similar pediatric cases in the literature. The latent period was 11-19 days between sulfasalazine therapy and the onset of high fever, generalized lymphadenopathy, and pruritic maculopapular rash that spared palms and soles and resolved with desquamation. All children had hepatotoxicity indicated by tender hepatomegaly, elevated liver enzymes, and histologic inflammation on liver biopsy. The similarity between these features and those of other sulfa-induced hepatotoxic reactions suggests that the sulfapyridine moiety is the etiologic agent in these hypersensitivity reactions. Those children with circulating immune complexes responded well to steroids. Proper therapy for this rare but severe idiosyncratic reaction includes prompt recognition and discontinuation of sulfasalazine, and high-dose corticosteroid therapy.
...
PMID:Sulfasalazine-induced hepatotoxicity in children with inflammatory bowel disease. 256 69
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