Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studies 151 case of
diabetes
in the young (age at first visit < or = 35 yrs) from January 1982 to June 1990. We classified the 151 cases into non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) (38.4%), malnutrition-related
diabetes mellitus
(MRDM) (36.4%), insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) (9.9%), secondary
diabetes mellitus
(2.6%) and unclassified category (12.6%). MRDM can be further classified into 2 groups: 22.5 per cent were fibrocalculous pancreatic
diabetes
(FCPD) and 13.9 per cent were protein deficient pancreatic
diabetes
(PDPD). Abdominal roentgenography were performed in 103 cases (68.2%) and pancreatic calcification were found in 34/103 (33%). Farming occupation (p = 0.001),
abdominal pain
(p = 0.005), male sex (p = 0.0015) and cataracts (p = 0.02) were statistically more common in MRDM comparing to NIDDM and IDDM taken together. There were no statistically significant differences in history of alcohol consumption and raw cassava intake between both groups. Family history of
diabetes mellitus
were more common in NIDDM comparing to IDDM and MRDM.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus in the young in Srinagarind Hospital. 800 54
The classical clinical picture of coeliac disease includes prolonged diarrhoea with failure to thrive. During the past two decades this type of active presentation of coeliac disease has decreased in many European countries, giving the impression that coeliac disease is a disappearing disease. However, this is not true. The disease can be found in older children with a more or less silent presentation. Silent coeliac disease can be detected by active screening with serological tests. Coeliac disease can be suspected in children suffering from mild gastrointestinal symptoms, such as
abdominal pain
, and in those with signs of nutritional deficiencies, as well as in children of first-degree relatives of already diagnosed coeliacs, patients with IgA-deficiency, patients suffering from dental enamel hypoplasia or dermatitis herpetiformis, and patients with some other disease known to be associated with coeliac disease, such as
diabetes mellitus
. According to the fundamental criteria of coeliac disease, the intestinal mucosa is flat when the individual is eating gluten-containing foods. However, this is not strictly true. Intolerance to gluten is obviously variable and the intestinal mucosa may be normal. This type of latent coeliac disease can be detected by analysing genetic markers, measuring antibodies in intestinal fluid or counting the density of intra-epithelial gamma/delta T cells which are increased greatly even in the latent phase of coeliac disease. Thus the general concept of the natural history of coeliac disease is changing.
...
PMID:Changing clinical features of coeliac disease. 802 51
Reviewed 60 studies of depressive symptoms among children and adolescents with chronic medical problems. Findings indicate that children with a chronic medical problem are at slightly elevated risk for depressive symptoms but that most are not clinically depressed. Although great variability in depressive symptoms was found across children with the same disorder, children with certain disorders (e.g., asthma, recurrent
abdominal pain
, sickle cell anemia) may be at greater risk than children with other disorders (e.g., cancer, cystic fibrosis,
diabetes mellitus
). Disorder severity was inconsistently related to depressive symptoms, while time since diagnosis, gender, and age were generally unrelated to symptoms. Parent (vs. child) ratings and the use of community (vs. normative) control groups were associated with higher ratings of depressive symptoms among children with a chronic medical problem.
...
PMID:Depression among children with chronic medical problems: a meta-analysis. 805
Twenty-six patients presenting with 33 episodes of Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA) and managed on a protocol oriented system were analysed.
Diabetes mellitus
was newly diagnosed at presentation in 18% of the 33 episodes. The presenting symptoms were polyuria and polydipsia (58%), nausea and vomiting (52%), change in sensorium (24%), hyperventilation (24%), and
abdominal pain
(18%). The main clinical findings at admission were dehydration (97%), acidotic respiration (67%), coma and confusion (61%), a clinically detectable source of sepsis (49%), fever (33%) and hypotension (9%). Blood sugar levels at admission ranged between 351 mg/dl and 1200 mg/dl (mean = 633 mg/dl). The mean serum potassium at diagnosis was 5.1 mmol/l and the mean calculated serum osmolality was 320 mOsm/kg. The mean serum osmolality was higher in those with disturbed conscious level. Infections, particularly those of the urogenital tract, were the main precipitating cause for the DKA. Only 12 of the 19 patients with sepsis had fever. Eight of the episodes were attributed to patients' non-compliance with insulin. Four patients died during the 33 hospitalisations, giving a mortality rate of 10%. Death occurred despite glucose control and stabilisation of the ketoacidotic state and was due to uncontrolled septicaemia. The mean duration of hospitalisation was 11 days. The ketoacidosis state was reversed after a mean duration of 9.5 hours, with an average soluble insulin requirement per patient of 52.4 units.
...
PMID:Diabetic ketoacidosis--a study of 33 episodes. 815 79
When glucose utilisation is impaired due to decreased insulin effect, ketones are produced by the liver from free fatty acids to supply an alternate source of energy. This adaptation may be associated with severe metabolic acidosis and tends to occur in patients with type I (insulin-dependent)
diabetes mellitus
. In addition, hypovolemia is an almost invariable finding with marked hypoglycemia and is primarily induced by the associated glucosuria. Ketoacidosis stimulates both the central and peripheral chemoreceptors controlling respiration, resulting in alveolar hyperventilation (Kussmaul's respiration). With the ensuing fall in pCO2 the patient tries to raise the extracellular pH. A fruity odor of acetone on the patient's breath sometimes suggests that ketoacidosis is present. The classical triad of symptoms associated with hyperglycemia are polyuria, polydipsia, and weight loss. Circulatory insufficiency with hypotension is not uncommon due to the marked fluid loss and acidemia. In more severely affected patients, neurologic abnormalities may be seen, including lethargy, seizures or coma. Some patients also have marked vomiting and
abdominal pain
. The history and physical examination may provide important clues to the presence of uncontrolled
diabetes mellitus
. Once suspected, the diagnosis can be easily confirmed by measuring the plasma glucose concentration. Glucosuria and ketonuria can be semiquantitatively detected with reagent sticks. Blood gas analysis and anion gap give objective information as to the severity of the metabolic acidosis. Therapy must be directed toward each of the metabolic disturbances: hyperosmolality, ketoacidosis, hypovolemia and potassium, and phosphate depletion. The mainstays of therapy are the administration of low-dose insulin and volume repletion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Ketoacidotic diabetic metabolic dysregulation: pathophysiology, clinical aspects, diagnosis and therapy]. 817 67
We have conducted a field study in India in the state of Kerala involving 28,567 inhabitants to determine the prevalence and clinical features of chronic pancreatitis of the tropics (CPT), an illness that is endemic in several regions of India. Selection criteria for the present study included: 1. Characteristic
abdominal pain
; 2. Evidence of
diabetes mellitus
; and 3. Evidence of malnutrition/malabsorption. A diagnosis of chronic calcific pancreatitis (CCP) was established by evidence of either 1, 2, or 3 plus X-ray evidence of pancreatic calculi. Diagnosis of noncalcifying chronic pancreatitis (NCCP) was established by 1, 2, or 3 plus an abnormal ultrasound of the pancreas and an abnormal bentiromide test. CPT was discovered among 36 individuals (prevalence 1:793). Strict entry criteria may have excluded additional cases. CPT was far advanced at the time of diagnosis in that 28 had evidence of calcification, 19 had
diabetes mellitus
, and 27 had an abnormal bentiromide test. The major differences from previous hospital-based studies were female predominance (male/female ratio, 1:1.8), onset of disease at an older age (mean 23.9 yr), and evidence of milder disease. We conclude that previous hospital-based reports that CPT is a severe illness with a male predominance may reflect greater access of seriously ill individuals in general and males in particular to medical care.
...
PMID:Prevalence and clinical features of chronic pancreatitis in southern India. 819 40
We report three cases of squamous cell carcinoma originating from ovarian dermoid cysts. All patients were postmenopausal with the chief complaints of lower
abdominal pain
and palpable masses found by themselves. Two of them had
diabetes mellitus
. The tumor sizes were all more than 10 cm. The diagnoses were made by histological examination of tissues removed at surgery. Two cases were categorized into the FIGO stage IIIc and one in stage Ia. Sonographic findings were characterized by a large adnexal mass with mixed components. An elevated serum squamous cell carcinoma antigen was found in the two cases of advanced stage and one of them also had an elevated serum CA-125 level. All reported cases were unilaterally involved without ascites at laparotomy, while omental lymph nodes metastases were noted in the two cases of advanced stage. One of the patients in the advanced stage died six months after surgery and radiation therapy due to recurrence. The other patient in the advanced stage refused further treatment even though recurrence was found five months after surgery and chemotherapy. There was no evidence of recurrence in the early stage case during the two years of follow-up.
...
PMID:[Squamous cell carcinoma originating from ovarian dermoid cyst--report of three cases]. 822 Dec 96
A 38-year-old woman presented with a 10-month history of postprandial
abdominal pain
and weight loss. She smoked two packs of cigarettes a day, but her history did not indicate
diabetes mellitus
, hyperlipidemia, or hypercoagulability. A lateral aortogram documented complete occlusion of all three mesenteric arteries but showed no evidence of atherosclerosis, arteritis, or medial fibroplasia. Two retrograde aortomesenteric grafts, one to the superior mesenteric artery and another to the meandering mesenteric artery, utilizing the greater saphenous vein were placed. Pathologic examination of the inferior mesenteric artery demonstrated changes that were considered diagnostic of thromboangiitis obliterans. We found only 10 confirmed cases of thromboangiitis obliterans involving the mesenteric vessels in the English language literature. The present case appears to be the first involving a woman and the only one in which the main trunk of all three mesenteric vessels was involved.
...
PMID:Intestinal ischemia secondary to thromboangiitis obliterans. 826 76
A 60-year-old lady with type II
diabetes
, arterial hypertension and 'melancholia' was treated with Lithium, a neuroleptic (Leponex) and an ACE inhibitor (Reniten). She was referred to our hospital because of
abdominal pain
, subfebrile temperatures, diarrhea and hematochezia. The radiological and sonographic examinations showed a thickened wall of the left hemicolon. Colonoscopy revealed a sharply delineated segment with pronounced inflammation in the descending colon and the proximal sigmoid colon, suggestive for an ischemic colitis. Histology of the inflamed colon was compatible with this diagnosis. Under suspended enteral feeding and antibiotic therapy the symptoms disappeared within two weeks, and a control colonoscopy six weeks later was completely normal. 1 1/2 years later the patient suffered from a second episode of ischemic colitis exactly a the same site. Again, complete cure was achieved by conservative treatment.
...
PMID:[Abdominal pain, fresh blood in the anus]. 827 9
Ninety-four consecutive patients (60 men and 34 women; mean age 68.5 +/- 11.5 years) with acute myocardial infarction (MI) were investigated retrospectively, in order to evaluate the prevalence, clinical features, and short-term course of the atypical forms (symptoms other than chest pain). An atypical MI was found in 30 patients, with a prevalence of 32% (95% confidence limits 27-36%). It was most prevalent in women above sixty-five years old (P < 0.05).
Abdominal pain
, paroxysmal dyspnea, and pulmonary edema were the most frequent symptoms (33%, 17%, 13%, respectively). No differences were observed between typical and atypical MI in regard to risk factors (hypercholesterolemia, arterial hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, cigarette smoking) and history of MI, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral vascular disease, or chronic lung disease. Significantly fewer patients with atypical MI had a history of angina pectoris (P < 0.05). No differences were observed in regard to previous medication, except for antiarrhythmic drugs, more often used by atypical patients (P < 0.05). Location and severity of MI (as judged by ECG and peak levels of creatine kinase in the serum) were similar in both subgroups, as were the complications (34% typical and 50% atypical) and death rate (12.5% and 16.7%, respectively). In conclusion, atypical MI is not less severe than typical. This emphasizes the need for a high suspicion index in many different clinical settings, but particularly (although not exclusively) in elderly females, in the presence of
abdominal pain
or otherwise unexplained paroxysmal dyspnea.
...
PMID:Prevalence, clinical features, and acute course of atypical myocardial infarction. 828 84
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10