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

A 34 year old woman with bowel bypass surgery and persistent abdominal pain had intussusception of the blind loop, which was visualized on an abdominal ultrasound examination. The ultransonic and radiographic findings are compared and presented. Ultrasound should prove to be an invaluable tool in evaluating abdominal pain in bowel bypass patients.
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PMID:The ultrasonic findings in intussusception of the blind loop in a jejunoileal bypass for obesity. 10

Papillary lymphoid hyperplasia of the terminal ileum is a benign condition associated with abdominal pain, intussusception, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage. It appears to represent a distinct clinicopathologic entity, separate from the usual idiopathic intussusception of infancy and childhood. The lesions are reasonably well circumscribed, localized in the submucosa of the terminal ileum, and composed of lymphoid tissue with prominent germinal follicles. Management by ileocolectomy resulted in complete cure with no postoperative complications in our six cases. However, many authors recommend conservative therapy. The cause is not known but there may be some relationship between these cases and intestinal adenovirus infection.
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PMID:Papillary lymphoid hyperplasia of the terminal ileum: an unusual cause of intussusception and gastrointestinal bleeding in childhood. 16 28

Inflammatory fibrous polyp of the ileum is a rare condition. This report adds one patient to the 11 previously reported. These lesions usually involve intermittent, colicky abdominal pain, often of several weeks duration and occasionally as a cause of acute intestinal obstruction. X-rays usually show small bowel obstruction or intussusception, but may be completely normal. The pathological diagnosis is seldom made before microscopic examination of resected specimens. They are clinically interpreted to be neoplasm and treated by segmental resection. No recurrences have been reported after treatment. Etiology is unknown.
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PMID:Inflammatory fibrous polyp (pseudotumor) of ileum, a rare cause of intestinal obstruction. 23 38

Intussusception of the defunctionalized intestinal segment following jejuno-ileal bypass for obesity has rarely been reported. Persistent crampy abdominal pain (often accompanied by nausea and vomiting) and normal radiologic evaluation are suggestive of this entity. The routine use of silver clips, although helpful in some instances, cannot exclude this diagnosis. A high index of suspicion and the use of sonography may prove that intussusception of the defunctionalized segment is more common than has been previously reported.
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PMID:Intussusception of the excluded segment following jejuno-ileal bypass. 44 76

Intussusception involving the excluded small bowel segment is an infrequent complication following intestinal by-pass procedures for morbid obesity. Because the intussusception involves bowel not in continuity with the alimentary stream, the usual diagnostic clinical and radiographic patterns fail to appear and recognition is usually delayed. This paper reports in detail such a patient, who was relieved of prolonged abdominal pain by operation. Previously reported patients are reviewed.
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PMID:Intussusception of the by-passed segment after jejunoileal by-pass for obesity. A cryptic problem. 51 4

Two cases of primary small bowel tumors causing an acute intussusception are presented. In one case two polyps were found and in the other case a lipoma in the wall of the jejunum. In both cases there were symptoms of recurrent bowel obstruction for several months before the acute condition. Although intussusception caused by a benign tumor of the small bowel is a rare condition it should be taken into consideration in the differential diagnosis of abdominal pain of doubtful origin.
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PMID:Recurrent small bowel obstruction caused by a benign tumor. A report of two cases. 70 94

The hemolytic-uremic syndrome consists of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, acute renal failure, and thrombocytopenia following a prodromal illness of gastroenteritis or upper respiratory infection. The syndrome can present in dramatic fashion with severe abdominal pain and signs of peritonitis suggesting an acute surgical crisis. In a series of 25 patients, 40% had abdominal pain, 25% had abdominal tenderness, and 20% had peritoneal signs. Clues to diagnosis in the early stages of the acute illness were mild to moderate hypertension, abnormal peripheral blood smear, anemia despite dehydration, and proteinuria. Significant abdominal pain and x-ray evidence of colitis may occur before development of typical laboratory findings, and these were evident in at least one case. Three patients underwent laparotomy for suspected bowel perforation. Colitis without perforation was found in all cases. In the absence of documented perforation, toxic megacolon, or intussusception, the decision to perform laparotomy in patients with hemolytic-uremic syndrome who have signs of peritonitis must be individualized. Failure to recognize the underlying renal problem can lead to serious errors in fluid and electrolyte management and delay of appropriate therapy.
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PMID:Hemolytic-uremic syndrome: a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma for the surgeon. 73 58

We present a 14 year old girl with a two years' history of colicky abdominal pain associated with the palpation of a tumor in the left upper quadrant of the abdomen. During these two years, the pain and the tumor appeared and disappeared spontaneously several times. In the operation we found a jejunojejunal intussusception, the head being a sessile polyp placed 20 cm from the ligament of Treitz. The pathological examination showed a polyp formed by mucosa similar to the gastric one with chief and parietal cells. We discuss the clinical pictures that can be associated with this pathological entity in this uncommon localization in opposition to the more common settling in Meckel's diverticulum.
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PMID:[Gastric polypoid heterotopy in the small intestine]. 74 31

Nonischemic intussusception is defined as a variant of acute intussusception exhibiting less acute symptoms of abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea in the older child, longer duration of symptoms (usually 4-14 days), signs of imcomplete bowel obstruction, and absence of intestinal ischemia. Over a 10 yr period (1964-1973) 20 children with this disease were treated without mortality or recurrence at three children's hospitals in Chicago, Illinois. The higher incidence of diarrhea, the lower incidence of a palpable abdominal mass, and the lower incidence of blood per rectum in nonischemic intussusception predispose to diagnostic errors and delays in treatment. Despite the longer duration of symptoms, this variant of intussusception can be treated initially with a careful attempt at barium hydrostatic reduction. If this fails, easy operative manual reduction is the rule.
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PMID:Nonischemic intussusception. 89 56

A 16-year-old Negro girl underwent exploratory laparotomy for ileocecal intussusception and was found to have moderately well-differentiated mucin-producing adenocarcinoma of the ileocecal valve. Specific aspects of this disease in children are discussed and an appeal for early diagnostic studies in cases of children who complain of weight loss, chronic constipation, and abdominal pain is made. Finially, on the basis of the natural history of the disease, a "second-look" operation is recommended.
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PMID:Adenocarcinoma of the cecum manifesting as intussesception in a 16-year-old patient: report of a case. 99 11


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