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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 43-year-old man presented with loose stools,
abdominal pain
and a weight loss of 15 kg. Investigations revealed a pancreatic insufficiency and an
enteropathy
with villous atrophy. Coeliaki was suspected. In spite of treatment with a gluten-free diet in hospital the patient did not improve and the villous atrophy remained unchanged. Other causes than coeliaki to villous atrophy were ruled out. The patient had a heavy consumption of alcohol and after prolonged abstinence the patient gained weight, the pain disappeared and the stools were normalized. The jejunal biopsy was now normal. This case report raises the possibility that
enteropathy
and villous atrophy may be causally related to alcohol overconsumption.
...
PMID:Can villous atrophy be induced by chronic alcohol consumption? 226 54
Six children with inflammatory bowel disease and nephrolithiasis are reported. Their mean age at the passage of the first stone was 12.5 years and the mean duration of active inflammatory bowel disease was 34.5 months. Four had ulcerative colitis and two had Crohn's disease. In three patients, the onset of stone disease was associated with a flare in the
bowel disease
. Stone passage in four patients was accompanied by an increase in
abdominal pain
; three experienced gross hematuria. Stones from four of the patients were composed primarily of calcium phosphate; stones from the remaining patients contained uric acid and/or calcium oxalate. The pathogenesis of nephrolithiasis as it relates to inflammatory bowel disease is considered and an approach to therapy offered.
...
PMID:Nephrolithiasis in childhood inflammatory bowel disease. 299 32
The clinical and pathologic data in 18 patients in whom pneumatosis intestinalis developed after bone marrow transplantation were reviewed to determine the significance of this finding. The colon, predominantly the right side, was involved in 17 of the 18 cases. Pneumatosis intestinalis developed earlier in the 14 symptomatic patients than in the four asymptomatic patients. Symptoms included diarrhea (12 patients),
abdominal pain
(six patients), rectal bleeding (two patients), and abdominal distension (two patients). Factors contributing to the development of pneumatosis intestinalis included pretransplantation chemotherapy and radiotherapy, steroid therapy, infectious colitis, graft-versus-host disease, and septic shock.
Intestinal disease
contributed to the deaths of seven patients with pneumatosis intestinalis, necessitated right hemicolectomy in another patient, and resolved with conservative treatment in 10 patients. In summary, bone marrow transplant recipients with pneumatosis intestinalis may follow either a benign or fatal course, depending on the underlying condition of the patient. Clinical correlation is important in determining the significance of this finding.
...
PMID:Pneumatosis intestinalis after bone marrow transplantation. 328 69
To better characterize Crohn's disease in the elderly, 24 patients ranging in age from 64 to 85 years were reviewed and compared with a younger group (20 to 61 years of age) matched for sex and duration of disease. Forty-one variables encompassing clinical, laboratory, and radiologic data and medical and surgical aspects of treatment were analyzed. The older group was characterized by a longer delay in diagnosis, more hematochezia, and a higher incidence of diverticular and cardiovascular disease. Elderly patients had less pain, less often a palpable abdominal mass, less small-
bowel disease
, less drug treatment, and no family history of inflammatory bowel disease. Otherwise, the disease in the two groups had similar manifestations, and no discriminating features to enable easy diagnosis in the elderly were found. Crohn's disease must be considered when evaluating older patients with diarrhea,
abdominal pain
, weight loss, and bleeding.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease in the elderly. A statistical comparison with younger patients matched for sex and duration of disease. 396 58
Two hundred and fourteen patients with Crohn's disease (CD) were investigated by radiological methods, endoscopy, and histological examinations of multiple biopsy and surgical specimens. Radiological lesions suggestive of CD were found in all patients with small-
bowel disease
but in less than half of those with large-bowel CD. Endoscopic findings were conclusive in 36% of patients with small-
bowel disease
, in 91% of those with small- and large-
bowel disease
, and in 86% of those with CD of the large bowel. Histological examinations of biopsy specimens were conclusive in less than one third of the patients. Histological examination of operative specimens, however, was conclusive in 90-100% of all patients. In 43 patients initially diagnosed as having ulcerative colitis,
abdominal pain
was less frequent, but diarrhea and visible blood were more frequent as initial symptoms. Of these patients, 21 had combined small- and large-
bowel disease
at the end of the observation time. In intestinal CD, multiple biopsy specimens may disclose Crohn-specific lesions even in endoscopically normal mucosa at a distance from visible lesions.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease. Diagnostic procedures and problems. 403 85
Cryptosporidial oocysts were identified by modified Ziehl-Neelsen stain in the stools of seven (3.2%) of 213 children with acute or chronic diarrhoea and one (0.9%) of 112 controls. All children with cryptosporidia were immunocompetent. Four of the index cases had a short illness (3-14 days) with watery diarrhoea, vomiting (2), and
abdominal pain
(2). Two index cases had chronic diarrhoea for over four months and failure to thrive. Both had a small intestinal
enteropathy
; one had cryptosporidial oocysts in stool specimens two months apart and the other had cryptosporidial schizonts attached to the jejunal mucosa. One index case had a colitis of indeterminate cause. Four of the index cases had recently travelled abroad. There had been an outbreak of gastroenteritis in the family of one of the index cases, and three affected sisters and an asymptomatic brother had oocysts in their stools. Cryptosporidial infestation seems to be associated with acute gastroenteritis and sometimes with chronic diarrhoea and small bowel damage in immunocompetent children.
...
PMID:Cryptosporidiosis in immunocompetent children. 403 4
The clinical, radiologic and pathologic features of 25 cases of ischemic
bowel disease
are presented. The majority of patients presented with the triad of
abdominal pain
, diarrhea and vomiting. In 13 patients the diarrhea was associated with the passage of bright red blood per rectum. There were 10 cases of infarction, 11 of enterocolitis and 4 had resulted in stricture formation. In five cases of enterocolitis the lesion was transient; symptoms improved with conservative medical management and the radiologic findings returned to normal. Barium enema examination yielded abnormal findings in the majority of the cases in which it was performed. Plain films of the abdomen, however, were not helpful. The actual mortality in this group of patients was 44%, 80% in those with infarction of the bowel and 20% in the other two groups.
...
PMID:Ischemic bowel disease. 441 59
We have studied 54 patients (age 19-83 years) with radiological and/or operative evidence of small bowel radiation injury, in order to assess clinical and biological features, final outcome, and prognostic factors of late radiation
enteropathy
; 23 of them had undergone previous small-intestinal by-pass or resection. During initial treatment (first 6 months), the patients received symptomatic medical treatment and 17 had a 3-6 week continuous enteral alimentation; 15 were operated on. At entry, 51 out of 54 complained of diarrhea, 32 had repeated vomiting and
abdominal pain
, 43 were undernourished (36 had lost more than 20 p. 100 of their normal weight, 27 had profound anorexia, 29 had hypo-albuminemia of less than 30 milligrams). Anemia was present in 30 patients. Seventy six and 88 p. 100, respectively, had hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia, with clinical symptoms in 14 cases. Fourteen patients, 12 of whom had undergone intestinal by-pass or resection, had biological hepatic abnormalities. Six patients died during initial treatment and 5 during follow-up; the actuarial survival rate was 72 p. 100 at four years (65 p. 100 for the unoperated patients, and 79 p. 100 for those previously operated on). Carcinoma was the cause of death in 5 cases. Social activity and state of nutrition were satisfactory in 22 out of the 32 patients seen in 1982 with 6-96 months (mean 29 months) follow-up.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Chronic radiation enteritis. II. General consequences and prognostic factors]. 661 74
Lactose breath hydrogen tests were given to 70 children and adolescents with chronic ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease in order to determine the prevalence of lactose malabsorption in childhood inflammatory bowel disease. Twenty-nine percent of these patients demonstrated lactose malabsorption; the majority of these children (70%) experienced gastro-intestinal symptoms during the test. The prevalence was not significantly different whether the diagnosis was ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. With the exception of those with diffuse small
bowel disease
, the location of intestinal involvement with Crohn's disease and the severity of clinical symptoms did not affect lactose malabsorption. Lactose malabsorption was not more frequent in patients with inflammatory bowel disease than in a group of children with recurrent
abdominal pain
and normal gastrointestinal x-rays, although significant differences in the prevalence of lactose malabsorption were observed in relation to ethnic background. Milk incubated with commercially available yeast lactase (lactAid, Surgarlo Co., Atlantic City, N.J.) for greater than 24 h prevented an increase in breath hydrogen when administered to 6 patients previously shown to have lactose malabsorption.
...
PMID:Lactose malabsorption in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease. 689 2
Fifteen patients with ischemia of the colon are presented. The majority showed a similar clinical presentation with hematochezia,
abdominal pain
, and diarrhea in an elderly patient population having associated disease. Colonoscopy was abnormal in all patients studied. Three endoscopic stages were recognized; (1) acute stage characterized by petechiae, pallor, and hyperemia; (2) subacute stage consisting of ulceration and exudation; and (3) chronic stage characterized by stricture, decrease in haustrations, and mucosal granularity. Conventional barium enemas were abnormal and suggested ischemic colitis in six of 15 patients. Rigid proctoscopy was normal or demonstrated nonspecific proctitis in 12 of 15 patients studied. Colonoscopic biopsies demonstrated superficial inflammatory changes in all patients. Thirteen patients had complete mucosal healing endoscopically in 2 weeks to 3 months with stricture developing in four patients. Because ischemic colitis is a distinct subtype of ischemic
bowel disease
most often limited to the superficial mucosa, colonoscopy is an alternative and usually safe modality in the diagnosis of this entity and proved more accurate that conventional x-ray and proctoscopy.
...
PMID:Colonoscopy in ischemic colitis. 729 23
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