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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infections
with Entamoeba histolytica do not necessarily cause disease in those infected. The parasite may act as commensal (cysts living in the bowel) or it may cause a broad spectrum of clinical illness. Some of the factors causing overt disease are poorly understood. An acute amebic dysentery is accompanied by bloody stools,
abdominal pain
and indigestion. The most important extraintestinal complication of an amebic infection is a liver abscess causing severe pain, fever, nausea and vomiting. The diagnosis of an amebic infection is based upon isolation of the parasite from the stools. Extraintestinal amebiasis is diagnosed - apart from the clinical picture - by serology. For treatment of intestinal amebiasis so-called contact-amebicides can be recommended. An amebic abscess of the liver usually responds well to dehydroemetine, metronidazole or any other derivative or imidazole and chloroquine. Surgical treatment of amebic liver abscess is only required if complications arise.
...
PMID:[Amebiasis]. 628 39
Among women attending a sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinic in Nairobi with vaginal discharge, Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis were isolated from the cervix in 32 (26%) of 122 and four (7%) of 58 women respectively.
Infection
with Trichomonas vaginalis, Candida albicans, Gardnerella vaginalis, and Mycoplasma spp were diagnosed in 42 of 122 (34%), 26 of 110 (24%), 75 of 100 (75%), and 42 of 89 (47%) women respectively. Mixed infections with at least two pathogens were found in 23 (26%) of 89 women examined for all microorganisms.
Infection
with N gonorrhoeae was significantly associated with
abdominal pain
.
...
PMID:Microbiology of vaginal discharge in Nairobi, Kenya. 640 73
The patient with diabetes represents to the surgeon a particular challenge in the management of acute abdominal problems. In addition to their ongoing and potential metabolic problems, diabetics have specific difficulty in their ability to handle infections and heal wounds. The present report reviews the general principles in the peri-operative management of diabetics and discusses the implications in the diabetic of several specific clinical problems. In view of the known accelerated atherosclerosis associated with diabetes, the risks of anesthesia and surgery must be assessed in the context of the coronary, cerebral, visceral, and peripheral vascular status.
Infections
in diabetics (potential or established) must be treated aggressively and promptly. Acidosis in the diabetic with
abdominal pain
must be considered both a metabolic problem and a possible secondary manifestation of an intra-abdominal process. In view of these challenges, the need for careful, anticipatory management of the diabetic patient facing major abdominal surgery is clear.
...
PMID:Diabetes and abdominal surgery: the mutual risks. 642 50
Within a three-year period 712 patients with Campylobacter jejuni infection were diagnosed at our laboratory in Helsinki and 524 (72%) were treated as outpatients. More than half (57%) of the patients became infected when abroad, chiefly during holiday trips in the Mediterranean and in East European countries. The risk of acquiring infection was about 250 times greater abroad than in Finland, and it differed considerably from country to country, being highest in Morocco and Tunisia. Among domestic cases the incidence of infection was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) during the summer and autumn months than during winter or spring. Animal contact prior to infection was reported in 59% of domestic and 31% of imported cases, and previous consumption of poultry in 28% and 42% of those from whom information was obtained. Besides diarrhoea (98%), the main symptoms included
abdominal pain
(87%), fatigue (81%), fever (78%), malaise (70%) and headache (51%). Arthralgia was observed in 19% and arthritis in 2% of patients. The mean duration of diarrhoea was 10.8 days, of fever 2.8 days.
Infection
PMID:Infection due to Campylobacter jejuni: a report of 524 outpatients. 646 63
Giardia lamblia is the first protozoan to be identified and recognized as an important pathogen in human disease. We studied 8 pediatric patients with giardiasis in order to examine the clinical spectrum, the structural changes of the small intestinal mucosa and mainly the protozoan's ultrastructural features. The most common clinical manifestations were diarrhea,
abdominal pain
, anorexia, vomiting, failure to thrive.
Infection
was confirmed by excreted cysts in the stools in one patient, by the presence of trophozoites in duodenal aspirate and on jejunal mucosa. Giardiasis was not associated with hypogammaglobulinemia in our patients and no or only slight mucosal abnormalities were present in jejunal biopsies, except one which showed a flat mucosa. Specimens for transmissions and scanning electron microscopy were taken. We could establish the protozoan's features, its normal distribution, its relationship to intestinal mucosa and structural indications of the normal reaction of intestine with the use of ultrastructural techniques. The trophozoites colonized the proximal intestine, adhered to microvilli of columnar cells near the bases of villi, wedged or lodged in mucus. The sticky mucus producing an effective diffusion barrier to nutrients could explain malabsorption phenomena. Numerous intraluminal lymphocytes were seen, suggesting an immune response. These observations indicate that in giardiasis the clinical spectrum and structural changes of the small intestinal mucosa vary widely, suggesting a different reaction of immune system and/or a different degree of infection.
...
PMID:[Giardiasis in children. Ultrastructural study of the parasite]. 664 80
Fifty-two of 142 (37%) American ex-prisoners of war that worked on the Burma-Thailand Railroad during World War II were found to have previously unrecognized symptomatic Strongyloides stercoralis infections. A characteristic urticarial creeping skin eruption on the abdomen, buttocks and thighs occurred in 92%.
Infection
was also associated with pruritus ani,
abdominal pain
, indigestion, heartburn, and diarrhea. Demonstration of larvae in ether-formalin stool concentrates in these chronic low density infections required 5 hours of microscopy per case to detect 90% of positive cases. Therapy with thiabendazole resulted in a clinical cure in 93% and a microscopic cure in 100%; but was associated with frequent side effects. Chronic strongyloidiasis should be considered in veterans of Far East conflicts and in others with intimate soil contact in rural Strongyloides stercoralis-endemic areas who present with recurrent creeping skin eruption,
abdominal pain
, and eosinophilia.
...
PMID:Chronic strongyloidiasis in World War II Far East ex-prisoners of war. 669 84
Campylobacter jejuni (previously called "related vibrio") has recently become recognized as an important cause of acute diarrhoeal disease in many countries. As with other intestinal pathogens, the clinical picture of C. jejuni infection varies from symptomless excretion to severe disease. The incubation period averages two to five days. Fever,
abdominal pain
and bloody diarrhoea are the usual symptoms of campylobacter enteritis. Although it is normally a self-limiting disease, complications such as cholecystitis, peritonitis, septicaemia and meningitis occasionally arise. The small intestine is thought to be the main site of infection, but the colon is also regularly involved. The disease might be more accurately described as an enterocolitis. Campylobacters, like salmonellae and yersiniae, are thought to be pathogenic by virtue of their invasive ability. Chemotherapy is usually effective. Erythromycin is commonly used for patients ill enough to require specific treatment. Although the infection can be transmitted from person to person, it is mainly a zoonosis with many possible routes of infection. Poultry is a potential source of infection, dogs may also transmit the disease and there have been major outbreaks of campylobacter enteritis from the consumption of untreated or inadequately treated milk and water. Further epidemiological work is hampered by the lack of suitable typing techniques.
Infection
1982
PMID:Campylobacter Enteritis. 710 20
Infection
with rickettsiae of the spotted fever group was clinically and serologically diagnosed in four dogs from two households on Long Island. In two dogs, clinical signs included high fever (to 40.5 C),
abdominal pain
, lethargy, depression, anorexia, and nystagmus. One of these dogs had conjunctivitis and petechial hemorrhages in the oral mucous membranes. The third dog initially had high fever, evidence of
abdominal pain
, anorexia, and depression. The fourth dog appeared clinically normal. Clinical signs disappeared following treatment with tetracycline given orally.
...
PMID:Rocky Mountain spotted fever in dogs. 738 Jul 21
A 47-year-old woman with stones in the gall-bladder suddenly developed severe upper
abdominal pain
. Cholesterol concentration was elevated, as were amylase (555 U/l) and lipase (408 U/l) concentrations, suggesting biliary pancreatitis. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography demonstrated a cyst, about 10 cm in diameter, in the left lobe of the liver, connected to the biliary tract system. Ultrasonography and computed tomography additionally showed a smaller cyst in the right lobe.
Infection
with Echinococcus granulosus was proven microbiologically on bile (demonstration of hooklets and protoscolices) as well as serologically. Transpapillary cholangioscopy demonstrated daughter cysts within the echinococcal cyst. The main cyst was rinsed with 20% NaCl for 10 days via a nasocystic catheter. In addition, mebendazole (three times daily 1000 mg) was administered for 13 months. The signs if inflammation receded and the cyst shrank to a small residual volume. Surgical intervention became unnecessary.
...
PMID:[Acute pancreatitis due to the rupture of an echinococcal cyst into the bile duct system]. 751 77
The clinical and pathological features of 22 patients, 11 males and 11 females 17-70 years of age (48.0 +/- 16.0 years), with hepatic tuberculosis were reviewed. Five patients had no evidence of extrahepatic tuberculosis (local form), and 17 had the miliary form. The clinical features of the miliary and local forms were similar with pyrexia,
abdominal pain
, hepatomegaly and body weight loss as the main manifestations. The biochemical findings were also quite similar in reversed albumin and globulin (A/G) ratio (2.9/3.5 vs. 3.2/3.4 g/dl) and disproportionate elevation of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) in comparison with bilirubin values but lower levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) (40.4 +/- 51.0 vs. 170.8 +/- 209.4 U/l; p < 0.05) and ALP (208.5 +/- 138.9 vs. 389.5 +/- 271.1 U/l; p < 0.05) in the miliary form. Patients with the local form had higher albumin (3.2 +/- 0.8 vs. 2.9 +/- 0.7 g/dl), aspartate aminotransferase (AST) (160.4 +/- 221.7 vs. 65.9 +/- 69.7 U/l), and gamma glutamyl-transpeptidase (gamma GT) (217.0 +/- 144.0 vs. 136.0 +/- 92.1 U/l), although the differences were not significant. The histopathological features of the miliary form were also similar to the local form with granuloma, caseation, acid-fast bacilli, fatty change and portal fibrosis as the main findings. The local form revealed more severe signs of hepatocytic damage while the miliary form was more wasting. The results suggest that the miliary and local forms of hepatic tuberculosis had quite similar clinical presentations and pathological features. The biochemical tests suggesting hepatic tuberculosis were reversed A/G ratio and disproportionate elevation of ALP.
Infection
PMID:Hepatic tuberculosis: comparison of miliary and local form. 774 92
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