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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three patients developed prominent neurologic symptoms and signs associated with Schoenlein-Henoch purpura. A 7 1/2-year-old boy was seen with status epilepticus after a 2-week history of generalized headaches, irritability, and intermittent colicky
abdominal pain
. A left
hemiparesis
and a left homonymous hemianopia with a right gaze preference that were present on initial examinations gradually resolved, but a mild left arm paresis persisted. Cutaneous, renal, and joint involvement followed initial CNS manifestations. The second patient, a 7-year-old girl, had a complex partial seizure with secondary generalization and a postictal
hemiparesis
seven days after presentation with classic signs of Schoenlein-Henoch purpura. Behavioral changes were noted during the acute phase of the illness. The third patient, a 13-year-old boy, developed signs of a left brachial plexopathy and transient weakness of his right leg during a complicated course of Schoenlein-Henoch purpura. Review of the world literature indicates that headaches and mental status changes are the most frequent neurologic complications of Schoenlein-Henoch purpura, followed by seizures, focal neurologic deficits, mononeuropathies, and polyradiculoneuropathies. The vasculitis of Schoenlein-Henoch purpura can involve the nervous system and may add significantly to the morbidity of the illness.
...
PMID:Neurologic manifestations of Schoenlein-Henoch purpura: report of three cases and review of the literature. 298 37
The study of serum from a patient with C2 deficiency is described. The patient had an episode of pneumococcal meningitis at 5 mo of age with seizures and transient
hemiparesis
and apparent purpuric skin lesions. He was first admitted to the University of Minnesota Hospitals at 10 yr of age following the discovery of proteinuria accidentally by his mother. Since then he has been admitted repeatedly to this hospital with numerous clinical findings including arthralgia, recurrent
abdominal pain
, proteinuria, membranous nephropathy, malar butterfly rash, seizures, personality aberrations, and recurrent fever. In June 1971, the patient developed positive DNA and DNP antibodies and positive LE cells. When the C profile was studied before and after recognition of lupus, C1q, C1s, and C4 dropped. C3 levels were elevated as were C5, C6, and C7, C3 proactivator had been reduced in the patient even before he developed lupus. Also because of a traumatic renal biopsy leading to a perirenal hematoma, he required surgery and a blood transfusion. 1 h after blood transfusion, a C2 titer of 23 hemolytic units was detected. Almost immediately levels of C3, C5, C6, and C7 dropped, C8 and C9 remained elevated. The addition of C2 from normal blood permitted dramatic activation of C3. These findings support the view that the rare deficiency in production of C2 predisposes to serious susceptibility to infection, vascular and mesenchymal disease as well as to renal disease and a lupus syndrome.
...
PMID:C2 deficiency. Development of lupus erythematosus. 457 55
A 6-year-old Doberman bitch was presented for an acute onset of circling,
hemiparesis
and depression. Clinical examination revealed conjunctivitis,
abdominal pain
, anaemia, decreased facial sensation, decreased jaw, tongue and pharyngeal tone, decreased conscious proprioception, decreased flexor withdrawal reflexes, and abnormal hemiwalking and hemistanding. Pancytopaenia was evident on haematological evaluation. Bone marrow cytology revealed a bacterial infection. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis was normal. Despite antibiotic treatment, the dog died. On autopsy, widespread multifocal inflammatory lesions were found to be present in the lungs, liver, spleen, meninges, lymph nodes, adrenal glands and kidneys. Listeria monocytogenes was isolated in pure culture from these organs and tissues. Histopathological examination showed numerous gram-positive intracellular rod-shaped bacteria seen in all the above-mentioned organs.
...
PMID:Generalised Listeria monocytogenes infection in a dog. 817 88
Thromboembolic complications in Crohn's disease are not rare. Most of them are disseminated vascular thrombosis or pulmonary emboli. Cerebral artery thrombosis is a rare complication of Crohn's disease. We describe a 27-year-old woman who had Crohn's disease for 8 years, with exacerbation 3 months before admission. She had bloody diarrhea,
abdominal pain
, weight loss, weakness, and anemia. Hemoglobin was 6.3 g/dl and she received 3 packed cell transfusions the day of admission. Her hemoglobin level rose to 13 g/dl. 2 days after admission she had generalized tonic-clonic convulsions, followed by
hemiparesis
. EEG and CT examinations showed right temporal lobe infarction. Many studies report a hypercoagulable state in Crohn's disease, which results in a thromboembolic tendency that is potentially fatal.
...
PMID:[Cerebral infarction in Crohn's disease]. 854 53
Acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC) is a potentially life-threatening complication, which is sometimes found in patients with multiple injuries, burns, or after an operation. It is unclear, however, whether AAC occurs after cerebrovascular disease (CVD). We studied the incidence of AAC complicating CVD and the clinical characteristics of AAC that occurs after CVD. One thousand three patients with CVD were studied who had been admitted at the acute stage to Kenwakai Hospital from January 1989 through September 1995 and to Seguchi Hospital of Neurosurgery from January 1993 through September 1995. There were 557 patients with cerebral infarction, 273 with cerebral hemorrhage, 94 with subarachnoid hemorrhage, and 79 with TIA/RIND. Twelve patients developed acute cholecystitis, ten of whom had AAC. Of the ten patients with AAC, six had cerebral infarction, two cerebral hemorrhage, and two TIA/RIND. Eight of ten were male. The incidence of AAC was 1.0% in the CVD patients studied. The majority of the AAC patients showed severe
hemiparesis
. The time interval from CVD to the onset of AAC ranged from 1 to 89 days, with a mean of 25.1 days. AAC occurred 0 to 16 days (mean 5.8 days) after the start of oral or tube food intake in five patients. The most common initial symptom was fever (70%), whereas
abdominal pain
was infrequent (20%). All the patients showed elevated CRPs and abnormal ultrasonographic findings for the gallbladder and some also had leukocytosis (60%) and elevated aminotransferase of more than 100 IU/l (30%). Cholecystectomy was performed on four AAC patients, but five were successfully treated with antibiotics. The cause of AAC complicating CVD seems to be multifactorial and probably is related to fasting, increased bile concentration, and arteriosclerosis. Our results strongly suggest that AAC is an unrecognized but important complication during acute stage CVD patients.
...
PMID:[Acute acalculous cholecystitis as a complication of cerebrovascular disease]. 921 20
A case of cardiac myxoma with multiple brain hemorrhage is reported. A 57-year-old male had complained of lower
abdominal pain
, diarrhea and fever for 3 days. On admission, he was in a condition of disseminated intravascular coagulation and sepsis. An abdominal CT scan showed infarction in the right kidney and spleen and an echocardiogram also showed myxoma in the left atrium. Although he presented no neurological symptoms, the brain CT showed multiple brain hemorrhage in the bilateral brain hemispheres. Total resection of the tumor was carried out for the improvement of the patient's general condition. Vimentin, S-100 protein and neuron specific enolase was positive in immunological staining and the pathological diagnosis was myxoma. Postoperative recovery of consciousness was poor and left
hemiparesis
developed. CT showed the increase of hematoma but angiography showed no cerebral aneurysm. The symptoms improved with conservative therapy. However the enhanced lesion remained in the right parietal lobe and an operation was performed 5 months later. The myxoma cell could not be found in the pathological examination, so tumor embolism, cerebral infarction, hemorrhagic infarction due to DIC, hematoma enlargement caused by heparinization during operation were suspected to have occurred in this order without tumor growth.
...
PMID:[A case of cardiac myxoma with multiple brain hemorrhage]. 1145 99
We report here a boy with infantile-onset fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD). At 8 months of age, he had the first cerebrovascular attack presenting with left facial palsy, followed by recurrent attacks of alternating
hemiparesis
. Involvement of systemic arteries was manifested by variable somatic symptoms: retarded growth of the right arm due to stenosis of the brachial artery, constipation and recurrent
abdominal pain
due to intestinal ischemia, and renovascular hypertension. Cerebral angiography disclosed stenosis of the bilateral internal carotid arteries and right vertebral artery, with development of moyamoya disease like collateral vessels. Systemic arteriography revealed stenosis of the right brachial and left femoral arteries, which was either tubular or mimicking a string of beads. This case was characterized by the early onset and involvement of many cerebral and systemic arteries resulting in severe and variable symptoms.
...
PMID:[A boy with infantile-onset fibromuscular dysplasia showing recurrent cerebrovascular attacks]. 1275 58
We report the case of a 28-year-old woman who presented simultaneously with superior sagittal sinus thrombosis and thyroid crisis, and was subsequently found to have protein C deficiency. February 3, 2003, she admitted complaining of
abdominal pain
. The diagnosis of appendicitis was made, and she was operated on under lumbar anaesthesia. Day 7, she developed acute headache and distal weakness of the left lower limb. On examination she was alert, with a temperature of 38 degrees C, a sinus tachycardia of 124/min and blood pressure 164/84 mmHg. Neurological examination revealed neck stiffness and left
hemiparesis
, predominantly in her lower limb. Gadlinium-enhanced brain MRI revealed extensive superior sagittal sinus thrombosis. CT scan demonstrated infarction in the right frontal cortex, and subarachnoid hemorrhage adjacent to the right cerebellar tentorium. The patient was treated with a free radical scavenger edarabon, and glycerin. No anticoagulant therapy was instituted. Over the next 24 hours, her condition worsened. She became comatose, as well as developing a generalized tonic-clonic seizure. Day 12, laboratory examinations revealed an undetectable TSH-level CTSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) <0.005 mcIU/ml), with a level of free thyroxin 7.77 ng/dl (0.9-1.7), free triiodothyronin 29.6 pg/ml (2.3-4.3), and positive anti-TSH receptor antibodies determined subsequently. Coagulation factor VIII activity was 155% (normal range 60-150). Protein C deficiency (antigen 59%, activity 49%) was also present, suggesting a congenital type I heterozygous deficiency. A diagnosis of thyroid crisis on the basis of Graves' disease was made. The patient remained comatose and died on Day 16, with renal failure. The patient had protein C deficiency, a well-established risk factor for cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT). However, additional risk factors are required in most cases to precipitate CVT. In our case, this trigger was most likely thyroid crisis, suggesting that thyrotoxicosis, probably through hypercoagulability, may be a predisposing factor for the development of CVT.
...
PMID:[Thyroid crisis and protein C deficiency in a case of superior sagittal sinus thrombosis]. 1737 Jun 53
A 32-years-old man with a past history of hemorrhoids presenting with
hemiparesis
was diagnosed as having sagittal sinus thrombosis with hemorrtagic infarction. Laboratory data revealed macrocytic anemia (Hb 11.2 g/d/) with hypoproteinernia (5.5 g/d). After discharge the patient developed
abdominal pain
, diarrhea, edema in the leg and sustained anemia. Final diagnosis through colon fiberscope findings was Crohn's disease Macrocytic anemia seemed to be induced by Vit. B12 deficiency due to malabsorption. The mechanism and causal relationship between Crohn's disease and sinus thrombosis is discussed.
...
PMID:[Superior sagittal sinus thrombosis caused by Crohn's disease and macrocytic anemia : a case report]. 1756 49
A 60-year-old lady was admitted in the hospital with the complaints of burning sensation during micturition and
abdominal pain
. She was diagnosed to have moderate hydronephrosis with left lower 1/3rd ureteric calculus for which ureteroscopy and lithotripsy were done. Her pre-operative random blood sugar was normal. On the 7th postoperative day the patient developed diabetic keto-acidosis which was followed by an acute onset of right sided peri-orbital oedema, proptosis and facial pain. Subsequently she developed diminished vision and lower motor neurone type of Ill, IV and VI cranial nerves paralysis on right side, disorientation and minimal left sided
hemiparesis
. ENT examination revealed black eschar nasal turbinates, nasal septum and palate and a provisional diagnosis of rhino-orbital cerebral mucormycosis was made. Extensive debridement was done for the patient and the specimen culture showed growth of mucor species. Patient was started on intravenous amphotericin-B and she started improving dramatically. This case of rhino-orbital cerebral mucormycosis with diabetic keto-acidois is presented here for its rarity.
...
PMID:A case of rhino-orbital cerebral mucormycosis with diabetic keto-acidosis. 1955 89
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