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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 49-year-old man with a 1-month history of episodic, severe abdominal pain sought medical attention. The patient's history was remarkable for type II diabetes, for which glipizide therapy had been initiated 2 months earlier. No other medications were being taken at the time the paroxysms of pain began. During the episodes of pain, both examination of the abdomen and abdominal roentgenograms revealed normal findings. Initial assessment, including ultrasonography and computed tomographic scanning of the abdomen, upper gastrointestinal and colon roentgenograms, and esophagogastroduodenoscopy, revealed no cause of the pain. Empiric trials of famotidine, sucralfate, and antacids failed to relieve the pain. Both urine and fecal specimens collected after an attack demonstrated substantially increased coproporphyrins. The glipizide regimen was discontinued; 2 months later, the stool coproporphyrins had decreased to normal levels. At follow-up more than 1 year later, the patient had had no recurrence of abdominal pain. Although other orally administered hypoglycemic agents and other sulfa compounds have been reported to precipitate acute attacks of porphyria, to our knowledge this is the first such case associated with glipizide. We suggest that glipizide be added to the list of medications to be avoided in patients with porphyria.
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PMID:A coproporphyria-like syndrome induced by glipizide. 200 89

The authors describe a major pancreatic lipomatous infiltration, causing a "pseudo-hypertrophy" of the pancreas, in a 70-year-old man. This lesion was responsible of a hyperechogenic area at ultrasonography and of an empty pancreatic bed ("vanishing pancreas") at computed tomography, suggesting lipomatosis. This entity is a special modality of senescence of pancreatic tissue whose origin remains obscure. The progressive atrophy of the acinar lobules and the islets of Langerhans was finally responsible of a mild degree of malabsorption and of diabetes type II. The compression of the main bile duct by the enlarged lipomatous pancreas, demonstrated by percutaneous cholangiography, caused a cholestatic jaundice with abdominal pain, which was treated by a surgical derivation (hepatico-duodenostomy). This is the first description of a lipomatous pseudohypertrophy of the pancreas causing an obstruction of the common bile duct.
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PMID:[Cholestatic jaundice complicating lipomatous pseudo-hypertrophy of the pancreas]. 207 97

A series of 10 cases of chronic calcifying pancreatitis from central Tunisia are reported. The mean age at presentation was 23 years and the male to female ratio was 1.5. The main clinical manifestations of the disease were abdominal pain (eight cases), weight loss (four cases), and diarrhea (three cases). Diabetes was recorded in four cases. The etiological investigations yielded negative results in all the patients. It is concluded that central Tunisia should be added to the regions where juvenile chronic calcifying pancreatitis of the "tropical type" may be observed.
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PMID:Juvenile idiopathic chronic calcifying pancreatitis: report of 10 cases from central Tunisia. 218 58

Screening for dyslipoproteinemias should be undertaken in all individuals older than 20 years of age at least once every 5 years. The initial screening, as recommended by the Adult Treatment Guidelines Panel of the National Cholesterol Education Program, is to determine the concentration of total blood cholesterol. This initial determination can be made on blood obtained in the nonfasting state. Further evaluation of the patient's lipoprotein concentrations is dependent upon the presence of other cardiovascular risk factors. in the absence of definite coronary heart disease, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, a family history of coronary artery disease, cigarette smoking, or severe obesity, the patient with a total blood cholesterol concentration less than 200 mg/dL requires no specific instruction and should have a repeated screening performed within 5 years. Patients with blood cholesterol concentrations greater than 200 mg/dL should have their lipoprotein profiles determined if they have atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease or two other cardiovascular disease risk factors. The lipoprotein profile includes the determination of fasting cholesterol and triglyceride and HDL cholesterol concentrations. From these values, the LDL cholesterol concentration can be calculated. This LDL cholesterol concentration is central in selecting the appropriate therapy. HDL cholesterol concentrations may be useful in evaluating patients with ischemic heart disease. Concentrations of HDL cholesterol less than 35 mg/dL are associated with increased risk for coronary artery disease. Although there is currently no convincing evidence that support the specific treatment of depressed HDL cholesterol concentrations, therapy directed to modulating lipoprotein metabolism in patients with heart disease and low HDL concentrations may be of benefit. Patients with recurrent abdominal pain, pancreatitis, and eruptive xanthomatosis frequently have fasting hypertriglyceridemia concentrations exceeding 1000 mg/dL. These patients should be identified in order to effectively reduce their triglyceride concentrations, which can prevent these complications.
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PMID:Detection and evaluation of dyslipoproteinemia. 219 76

Pancreatic exocrine and endocrine function is described in 29 patients with pancreas divisum and upper abdominal pain. The diagnosis was made by endoscopic pancreatography (ERP) after cannulation of the major, as well as the accessory, papilla in all patients. At ERP, six patients had signs of marked and six patients moderate pancreatitis, whereas 17 patients were free from pancreatitis changes. Pancreatitis was found in the dorsal anlage in 12 patients (41%) of whom seven (24%) had similar alterations also in the ventral anlage. Fecal fat excretion was increased in 48% of the patients, and abnormal serum levels of pancreatic enzymes were found in more than one-third. Impaired insulin release was detected in 21% of the 28 patients examined following ingestion of oral glucose. Including an additional patient with manifest diabetes, 24% (7/29) had signs of endocrine insufficiency. The serum-insulin, serum-C-peptide and insulin/glucose pattern following an oral glucose load reflected the degree of severity of pancreatitis changes at ERP. Altogether, 66% of the patients had morphological and/or functional evidence of pancreatic affection.
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PMID:Pancreatic exocrine and endocrine function in patients with pancreas divisum and abdominal pain. 223 Mar 57

The clinical manifestations of septicemic melioidosis and other bacterial septicemia were studied at Srinagarind Hospital, Khon Kaen University. Forty-three cases of septicemic melioidosis and 68 non-melioidosis septicemia cases were analysed. By univariate analysis, the following clinical features are associated with septicemic melioidosis: male patients; age below 45 years; underlying diabetes mellitus or renal failure; pulmonary infection, impending respiratory failure and multiorgan involvement, while abdominal pain and urinary tract infection were more common in non-melioidosis septicemia. By using discriminant analysis and logistic regression, 3 features (diabetes mellitus, multiorgan involvement, and no abdominal pain or pulmonary infection) could discriminate the two groups with the accuracy of more than 85 per cent.
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PMID:Discriminant analysis among septicemic melioidosis and other bacterial septicemia. 228 Feb

Seven young patients presenting with diabetic amyotrophy, unusual at their age, are described. Besides symptoms suggestive of proximal muscle weakness and occasionally of diabetes, all patients were underweight; abdominal pain occurred in all the patients. The diagnosis of amyotrophy was confirmed on electromyography and nerve conduction studies in all patients, and muscle biopsy in two patients. All patients recovered fully on control of diabetes with insulin. Only two episodes of stress induced ketosis were recorded in these 7 patients. These patients were not ketotic though they were severely uncontrolled on omission of insulin. They had normal lipid levels, and had no other complications of diabetes. Pancreatic calculi were found in only one patient. We describe here the clinical profiles of these patients and discuss the possible aetiologies of diabetes and the clinical implications.
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PMID:Amyotrophy in young diabetics: clinical profiles. 239 Dec 99

During the last 25 years, 134 patients with chronic pancreatitis were treated surgically in our clinic. According to intraoperative measurement of the pancreatic intraductal pressure, both perfusion pressure and residual pressure in the patients with dilated pancreatic duct were significantly higher than those in control patients. Operative procedures included side-to-side pancreaticojejunostomy in 47 patients, 40%-80% caudal pancreatectomy in 28, pancreaticoduodenectomy in 16, pancreatic sphincteroplasty in 10, and others. The effect of operation on abdominal pain was noted in 97% of the patients. The study of operative effect on abdominal pain and follow-up results showed the excellent maintenance of operative benefit. Surgical treatment, however, could not help improve impaired function of the pancreas. Ten of 34 late deaths were related to the failure of controlling diabetes. Therefore, long-term follow-up care to the pancreatic dysfunction is considered to be necessary even after complete relief of abdominal pain.
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PMID:The role of surgical treatment for chronic pancreatitis. 242 Feb 94

Rejection episodes were studied in 15 patients, in whom no kidney graft could serve as a marker for rejection, subjected to pancreas transplantation with pancreatoenterostomy and temporary exteriorization of the pancreatic juice (10 pancreas alone, 3 pancreas after kidney, and 2 combined pancreas and kidney in which the kidney was not functioning.) Twelve patients (80%) had a total of 18 rejection episodes. In the first 11 patients, 13 rejection episodes were diagnosed by a decline in amylase activity in the pancreatic juice, whereas in the next 4 patients, 5 rejection episodes were diagnosed by positive cytology in the pancreatic juice. Neopterin in pancreatic juice and immunoreactive anionic trypsin in serum showed promise as rejection markers, whereas serum neopterin, serum amylase, and serum immunoreactive cationic trypsin did not. Unspecific signs of rejections were an increase in white blood cell count, clinical symptoms such as fever, abdominal pain, and arthralgia. All acute rejection episodes were successfully reversed by antirejection treatment. However, late rejections diagnosed by impaired endocrine function were seen in 6 of the 15 (40%) patients, and the prognoses for these rejections were worse: 4 patients (27%) lost their grafts because of chronic rejections, and 2 patients still had impaired endocrine function.
Diabetes 1989 Jan
PMID:Markers for pancreas-graft rejection in humans. 246 97

The clinical case of a 67-year-old woman admitted for abdominal pain whose interpretation created difficulties but which corresponded substantially to the pain encountered in intestinal occlusion associated with diabetes mellitus and increase in amylasemia is reported. After decrease, 48 hours after hospitalization, necropsy revealed extensive acute pancreatitis associated with infarction of the small bowel to occlusion of the superior mesenteric artery.
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PMID:[An association of acute pancreatitis and intestinal infarct due to superior mesenteric artery occlusion]. 247 24


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