Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Previous studies have demonstrated a marked reduction of haematological and non-haematological toxicity if weekly doses of docetaxel <40 mg/m2 were used. Reviewing the literature, neutropenic enterocolitis is uncommon but not unknown in patients treated with taxane-based chemotherapy. Although this complication occurs rarely, here we report on two patients, one with metastatic breast cancer and one with non-small-cell lung cancer, treated on a weekly schedule with single-agent docetaxel. Both patients developed excessive and fatal haemorrhragic gastroduodenitis and enterocolitis associated with grade 2 and 3 neutropenia. We would like to stress the importance of symptoms such as abdominal pain and tenderness, fever, diarrhoea and mucositis, with or without neutropenic fever, in patients treated with docetaxel-based chemotherapy. These symptoms should alert the physician and supportive care management should be started aggressively and immediately.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal toxicity associated with weekly docetaxel treatment. 1212 45

A 63-year-old woman had previously been admitted to another hospital due to fever, abdominal pain and diarrhea. She was treated with fasting, antibiotics and G-CSF administration because of the coexistence of neutropenia, and the symptoms improved. However, discontinuation of G-CSF administration resulted in a recurrence of the neutropenia accompanied with enterocolitis. After admission to our hospital, a diagnosis for idiopathic AIN was performed as she tested positive in both granulocyte immunofluorescence and granulocyte agglutination tests. Administration of corticosteroid following G-CSF resulted in a continuous increase in the neutrophil count and the disappearance of anti-neutrophil autoantibodies.
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PMID:[Successful treatment with G-CSF and corticosteroid of adult idiopathic autoimmune neutropenia presenting as recurrent enterocolitis]. 1250 86

Bacterial diarrhea can be classified into two clinical entities, noninflammatory diarrhea and inflammatory diarrhea syndromes. The latter type of diarrhea is characterized by bloody and puruloid mucus stool, and is often accompanied by fever, tenesmus, and severe abdominal pain. Pathogenic bacteria causing the inflammatory diarrhea syndrome include Salmonella, Vibrio, Shigella, enteroinvasive and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli, Campylobacter, Yersinia, Chlamydia, and Clostridium difficile. The pathologic changes in the inflammatory diarrhea syndrome range from a superficial exudative enterocolitis to a transmural enterocolitis with overt ulceration. This syndrome is also designated as bacterial hemorrhagic enterocolitis because of its usual manifestation by bloody diarrhea. The diagnostic approach needs information on the patient's age, travel history, epidemiological associations, sexual practice, and medical history, including usage of antibiotics. Bacterial information can be obtained by microscopic study, culture, and the identification of specific bacterial toxins. Flexible colonoscopy with biopsy is useful for the differentiation of bacterial hemorrhagic enterocolitis from idiopathic ulcerative colitis and ischemic colitis. Physicians should be familiar with the diagnostic modalities used to detect the specific pathogens causing hemorrhagic bacterial enterocolitis; namely, bacterial culture, serology, histology, and nucleic acid technologies.
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PMID:Bacterial hemorrhagic enterocolitis. 1264 May 23

Human infections due to Yersinia enterocolitica have been reported worldwide, predominantly in Europe. However, there have been few reports of Yersinia enterocolitica infection in Taiwan. We report a case of Y. enterocolitica sepsis in a 15-year-old Taiwanese girl with Cooley's anemia and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. She presented at admission with fever, shock and consciousness disturbance. She had symptoms of abdominal pain, vomiting and diarrhea for three days before admission. Blood pressure stabilized after intravenous normal saline rescue. Blood culture yielded Y. enterocolitica 2 days later and ceftriaxone was administered according to the results of sensitivity tests. She recovered well after a course of antibiotic treatment. Though Y. enterocolitica sepsis is rare in Taiwan, clinicians should be aware of its tendency to develop in patients with Cooley's anemia, fever and enterocolitis and that its clinical course may include sepsis leading to shock.
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PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica sepsis in an adolescent with Cooley's anemia. 1278 40

Neutropenic colitis, characterized by neutropenia plus cecal and ascending colon inflammation, is a rare complication of chemotherapy in hematological malignancies and, less commonly, of medication used to treat other diseases (e.g., hyperthyroidism). We report a case of neutropenic colitis with cecal perforation in a 44-year-old woman treated with methimazole for hyperthyroidism. The patient had received subtotal thyroidectomy for hyperthyroidism in 1984 and recurrent hyperthyroidism was found in 1993. She was then treated with methimazole for almost 3 months, when sustained fever, diarrhea, weakness, and progressive abdominal pain developed. Due to the findings of peritonitis and neutropenia, she underwent emergent laparotomy. During the operation, chronic ulceration of the cecum with perforation was found and resection of the ileocecal segment and ileostomy were performed. Three months later, closure of the ileostomy with anastomosis of the ileocolostomy was performed. Her condition was stable during 9 years' follow-up. In conclusion, neutropenic enterocolitis has a broad spectrum of clinical presentations that require alertness in patients with neutropenia. When detected late, it may lead to bowel perforation and even mortality.
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PMID:Neutropenic colitis with cecal perforation during antithyroid therapy. 1462 10

Two siblings with allergic purpura after Salmonella O9 infection were reported. A girl (patient 1) aged 4 years and 4 months started to have knee joint pain and abdominal pain followed by purpura of the lower extremities and was referred to us for treatment of allergic purpura. She had contracted enterocolitis one month before visiting our hospital and Salmonella enteritidis was identified. During the course of the illness she had nephritis associated with allergic purpura. However, she made a favorable progress and proteinuria and hematuria disappeared within 6 months. A boy (an elder brother of patient 1) aged 6 years was admitted to our hospital because of the allergic purpura. He similarly had contracted Salmonella enterocolitis. He had severe gastro-intestinal symptoms including abdominal pain, vomiting and bloody stool, which rapidly subsided after initiation of treatment with intravenous hyperalimentation combined with prednisolone. It is possible that allergic purpura in our patients was closely associated with Salmonella enteritidis infection. Further accumulation of cases is a requisite to clarify an association of Salmonella enteritidis infection with allergic purpura and pathogenesis of allergic purpura.
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PMID:[Two siblings with allergic purpura following Salmonella O9 enterocolitis]. 1467 13

We report a case of acute lymphoblastic leukemia that was complicated by neutropenic enterocolitis (typhlitis) during the initial period of remission-induction chemotherapy. The patient's clinical symptoms resolved after aggressive treatment with intravenous fluids and electrolytes, nasogastric decompression, bowel rest, total parenteral nutrition, broad-spectrum antibiotics, and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. Netropenic enterocolitis should always be considered in neutropenic leukemic children with the triad of fever, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Gastrointestinal hemorrhage may also accompany the symptoms described above. Plain roentgenogram, ultrasonography and computed tomography of the abdomen are helpful for making the diagnosis of this clinical condition. Early recognition and proper medical management of neutropenic enterocolitis may prevent the need for surgical intervention, and/or be life-saving.
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PMID:Successful medical management of neutropenic enterocolitis (typhlitis) in a child with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1469 5

Enterocolitis in oncology patients remains an important complication, but there is a lack of insight into its likely severity from microbial, pathological and inflammatory aspects. Paediatric oncology patients admitted with neutropenic fever, who developed abdominal pain and diarrhoea, were monitored by the takers of rectal biopsies, cultures, and inflammatory marker measurements. Twenty-five patients were included (mean age 7.1 years). 8 patients (32%) needed intensive care treatment, 3 (12%) patients died. Gram-positive bacteraemia was diagnosed in 4 patients (16%). Most patients had negative blood and stool cultures. Predictors of a severe clinical course of the enterocolitis were an increased serum interleukin-8 (IL-8) (>1000 pg/ml) level and an increased serum C-reactive protein level (CRP) (>150 mg/l) level, both measured on the first day of clinical illness. Relative risks (RR) for admission to an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) were 11.3 (95% Confidence Interval (CI) 1.6-77.9) for elevated IL-8 levels and 6.4 (95% (CI) 0.92-45.1) for increased CRP levels. Rectal biopsies and pathology could not predict outcome (P=0.22). IL-8 analysis at the onset of enterocolitis symptoms can identify high-risk patients, which might be used clinically to design future intervention trials.
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PMID:Severity of enterocolitis is predicted by IL-8 in paediatric oncology patients. 1496 25

We describe 3 cases of fatal but clinically unsuspected anerobic bacteremia amongst hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients treated empirically for fever and neutropenia with third or fourth generation cephalosporins. All patients had diarrhea but none had classical findings of neutropenic enterocolitis. HSCT recipients with fever, neutropenia and gastrointestinal tract symptoms such as abdominal pain or diarrhea or with septic shock despite broad spectrum antibiotics should receive an antimicrobial agent with anerobic activity.
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PMID:Fatal anerobic bacteremia after hematopoietic stem cell transplant. 1506 Dec 11

The main purpose of this report is to focus on the importance of an accurate etiologic diagnosis of gastrointestinal complications during chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia, taking into account that a syndrome characterized by bowel wall thickening associated with diarrhea and abdominal pain may have etiologies different from neutropenic enterocolitis (NE) and in such a case necessitate a different treatment approach. We describe a case of a 46-year-old woman affected by acute myeloid leukemia presenting the onset of a syndrome with clinical features of NE. Supportive therapy for NE was instituted, but during treatment the patient presented a life-threatening gastrointestinal bleeding and was submitted in emergency to hemicolectomy. Following surgery, the patient recovered completely and she is currently alive in complete remission after receiving allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Histological examination of the surgical specimens showed that the acute abdominal syndrome was related to massive infiltration of the bowel by leukemia cells. A correct baseline evaluation and a prompt diagnosis of the complication may help in making the therapeutic decision, which in our case led necessarily to a surgical procedure, because the bleeding was due to post-chemotherapy necrosis of the leukemic infiltrating tissue. A close collaboration between the hematologist and the surgeon may provide guidelines for behavior in such cases, giving these patients the possibility of survival and the opportunity to carry on the treatment planned for the primary disease.
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PMID:Neutropenic enterocolitis in acute leukemia: diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma. 1506 70


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