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

Pelvic pneumography was performed in 150 children, including those with precocious puberty, suspected pelvic masses, abdominal pain, virilization, ambiguous genitalia, gonadal dysgenesis, Stein-Leventhal syndrome, amenorrhea, and contralateral inguinal hernia detection. Pneumography proved safe, accurate, and easy to perform. However, advances in sonography have limited the use of pneumography primarily to the investigation of infant intersex problems and confirmation of idiopathic precocious puberty in the infant or very young girl.
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PMID:Pneumopelvigraphy in childhood. 10 49

Two cases of perforation of the small intestine associated with minor abdominal trauma and right inguinal hernia are presented along with a review of 104 cases in the literature, The condition is treacherous because this minimal injury can produce catastrophic intraabdominal perforation. The most reliable signs and symptoms are abdominal pain associated with guarding and rigidity. Laboratory data may only show leukocytosis and signs of dehydration. Early operation, using a formal laparotomy, is imperative. Systemic antibiotics are recommended.
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PMID:Rupture fo the intestine in patients with hernia. 112 11

Inguinal hernioplasty was performed in a series of 14 female patients with occult inguinal hernias over a period of five years. During this time 194 herniorrhaphies were performed and thus the incidence of repair for occult hernia was 8%. These patients represent a definite syndrome which has not been sufficiently documented in the surgical literature. The condition is defined and the anatomic pathology documented photographically. The mean age in this series was 20 years with a range of 15-45 years. Thirteen of the 14 cases were followed a mean of 10 months postoperatively. Ten of these were considered excellent results and were symptom-free. The remaining three cases were judged as good results but objective evaluation was less conclusive. There have been no recurrences. The anatomic basis for this syndrome has been documented by others. The absence of an impulse on clinical examination is explained on the basis of size of the hernias and the difference in the anatomy between males and females. Occult inguinal hernia in the female is clinically recognizable on the basis of intermittency, character, and localization of pain and after the exclusion of other pathologic conditions. This syndrome should be entertained in the differential diagnosis of lower abdominal pain in the female. Hernioplasty is safe and effective therapy and returns the patient to normal activity.
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PMID:Occult inguinal hernia in the female. 113 Aug 68

Patients with a complaint of lower abdominal pain and a history of lower abdominal surgery, particularly inguinal herniorrhaphy, appendectomy, and procedures incorporating a Pfannenstiel incision, should have nerve entrapment considered in the differential diagnosis. Careful history and physical examination in conjunction with selected use of the ilioinguinal-iliohypogastric nerve block can confirm the diagnosis of nerve entrapment and preclude an unnecessary workup of these patients. Of the patients with nerve entrapment, most will experience complete relief of symptoms following serial injections and require no further treatment. The remainder will experience only temporary relief and require surgical interruption of the nerve involved. In those patients who obtain no relief from the nerve block, further workup for a source of their pain is warranted. Most of these patients were found to have a subclinical recurrence of an inguinal hernia.
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PMID:Nerve-entrapment syndromes from lower abdominal surgery. 368 Dec 20

In two instances of undiagnosed true hermaphrodites, the patients presented with abdominal complaints requiring emergency operations. These patients, because of the abnormal location of the gonadal tissue, were considered to be at a higher risk for malignant degeneration or mechanical problems which may present in an acute state and, therefore, should be castrated. The presentation of either a male patient with hypospadias or cryptorchism, or both, or a female patient with genitalia ambiguity with an incarcerated inguinal hernia or abdominal pain should lead one to consider the diagnosis of true hermaphroditism. This is especially true if it occurs on the right side or if an abdominal mass is palpated. In these individuals, specimens of the contralateral gonad taken intraoperatively for biopsy and postoperative cytogenetic studies will aid in the diagnosis.
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PMID:Emergency operation in the true hermaphrodite. 668 53

Case reports of two patients with occult rupture of the spleen are presented. In one, blunt trauma appeared to involve only the neck and upper chest, resulting in two distinct tracheal injuries and no clinical indication of abdominal injury. On the 5th day after injury this patient strangulated an indirect inguinal hernia. At subsequent surgery, a ruptured spleen was also found. The second patient gave no history of trauma and presented in cardiac and respiratory failure after a 2-month illness characterized by abdominal pain. On clinical and biochemical assessments, he was considered to have pancreatitis complicated by pseudocyst formation. Laparotomy revealed intra-abdominal haemorrhage and a ruptured spleen. The diagnosis and complications of occult ruptured spleen are discussed.
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PMID:Occult ruptured spleen--two unusual clinical presentations. 670 57

A case of an incarcerated Richter's hernia in a 12-mm trocar site is presented. A 72 year old man underwent laparoscopic herniorrhapy because of a recurrent inguinal hernia. On the sixth postoperative day he developed abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and abdominal distension. Plain abdominal X-ray showed bowel obstruction. Computed tomography with oral contrast showed herniation of small bowel above the fascia. The patient was immediately reoperated, the intestine was reduced, and the fascial defect at the trocar site closed. Three days later he underwent surgery again due to a small perforation of the small bowel and a persistent fascial defect. The patient had an uneventful postoperative course. Herniation through a trocar site is a rare complication-incarceration extremely rare. We recommend that all fascial defects of 10 mm or more are closed sufficiently.
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PMID:[Richter hernia in trocar site after laparoscopic herniotomy]. 748 3

Analysis of the fine ridge configurations on the digits of the palms and soles (dermatoglyphics) may sometimes help in the diagnoses of certain medical disorders. Dermatoglyphic patterns have been reported to be associated with congenital anomalies, such as congenital heart disease, duodenal ulcer, abdominal pain, and constipation. The palmar dermatoglyphic patterns of 77 children with constipation (39 functional and 38 organic constipation) were recorded. The control group consisted of 84 children with inguinal hernia. Those patients with at least one arch identified on any digit of either hand were termed arch positive. There was no significant correlation between arch positivity and constipation (functional or organic), or inguinal hernia (chi square, P = 0.9211). Therefore, the presence of palmar arches cannot be used as a screening device for children with chronic constipation, especially of organic etiology.
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PMID:Dermatoglyphic patterns in children with chronic constipation. 762 62

In most cases a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurism is dramatic, with rapid deterioration of the clinical condition of the patient. With abdominal and back pain, pulsatile tumour, and development of bleeding shock the diagnosis is obvious. In some cases the symptoms are not clear and the condition can be misinterpreted. The authors describe a case to illustrate this. A 74 year-old male was admitted to hospital with vague abdominal pain and left inguinal hernia. It later turned out that a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurism was the reason for his symptoms and signs. 14 similar cases are reported in the literature.
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PMID:[Ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. A rare form of presentation]. 833 76

To evaluate the symptomatic outcome after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, a standard symptom questionnaire was sent to three patient groups at least 1 year after surgery: 115 patients had undergone laparoscopic cholecystectomy; 200 had undergone open cholecystectomy; and 200 had had inguinal hernia repair. Return of questionnaires was higher after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (100 of 115; 87.0 per cent) than the open procedure (167 of 200; 83.5 per cent) or hernia repair (163 of 200; 81.5 per cent). There was no difference in the number of patients who considered the operation to have cured or improved their preoperative symptoms after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (94 of 100; 94.0 per cent), open cholecystectomy (157 of 167; 94.0 per cent) or hernia repair (154 of 163; 94.5 per cent). Similar numbers considered their operation to have been a success (94.0, 95.2 and 94.5 per cent respectively). The prevalence of abdominal pain, nausea, flatulence, food intolerance and heartburn was similar in all groups of patients following operation. Diarrhoea occurred more often following laparoscopic (6.0 per cent) and open (4.2 per cent) cholecystectomy than hernia repair (1.2 per cent). Patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy tended to have a higher incidence of nausea or vomiting than those undergoing the open procedure, and consumed significantly more antacids (23.0 versus 12.0 per cent, P < 0.02). Laparoscopic cholecystectomy achieved the same rate of patient satisfaction as open cholecystectomy, with no apparent symptomatic advantage.
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PMID:Symptomatic outcome after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 840 84


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