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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
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Emphysematous pyelonephritis is a severe infection characterized by the presence of gas within the renal parenchyma and perirenal tissues. Two cases of this disease are presented. They were the 16th and 17th case reported in Japan. Case 1 was a 63-year-old woman with diabetes mellitus and liver cirrhosis. She was hospitalized for abdominal pain and anuria. Renal X-rays showed a gas shadow in and around the left kidney, but no evidence of upper urinary tract obstruction. Although hemodialysis was done, she died of heart failure. Case 2 was a 54-year-old man with diabetes mellitus was admitted with the complaint of fever and left abdominal pain. Renal X-rays showed a gas shadow in and around the left kidney but no evidence of upper urinary tract obstruction. He was treated with intensive antibiotic therapy, control of blood sugar, intravenous drips and percutaneous drainage. Clinical features improved, but deteriorated after 40 days of therapy. The gas shadow remained unchanged on CT scanning, and aortography showed the occlusion of the left renal artery. Nephrectomy was done after 50 days. Seventeen cases of emphysematous pyelonephritis in the literature including our cases are reviewed, especially the choice of the treatment is discussed.
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PMID:[Two cases of emphysematous pyelonephritis--considerations on the choice of treatment]. 359 89

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), a fascinating disease that had been reported perhaps 50 times in varying guises over the preceding century, suddenly burst forth in the 1960s and was recognized in clusters of cases almost simultaneously in Paris, London, and West Haven, Connecticut. The spectrum of the disease has broadened. Initially, it was associated almost exclusively with alcoholic cirrhosis, but it has now been found in association with posthepatitic cirrhosis, cryptogenic cirrhosis, chronic active liver disease, and, occasionally, in biliary cirrhosis and cardiac cirrhosis. Recently, it has been reported in alcoholic hepatitis and acute viral hepatitis. It occurs occasionally in malignant ascites and in pancreatitis in the absence of cirrhosis. It is surprisingly common in disseminated lupus, in which it occurs relatively more commonly than in alcoholic cirrhosis. A similar syndrome, primary peritonitis, occurs frequently in children with nephrotic ascites. The clinical pattern of SBP has broadened. Initially it consisted of abdominal pain, fever, rebound tenderness, hypoactive bowel sounds, hypotension, encephalopathy, and cloudy ascites with large numbers of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in ascitic fluid. Each and every symptom, sign, and laboratory abnormality may be absent; indeed, the syndrome can be completely silent. Initially, the causative bacteria appeared to be almost exclusively enteric, but now the list of bacteria isolated in cases of SBP looks like a bacteriology textbook. Anaerobes are rare. Multiple organisms usually suggest nonspontaneous origin such as perforation or vasopressin induction. The differentiation between spontaneous and nonspontaneous bacterial peritonitis is crucial in the differential diagnosis. The great majority of cases of SBP develop in the hospital, 80% more than one week after admission. It is therefore a nosocomial disease that may be precipitated by procedure-induced bacteremia, gastrointestinal bleeding, or diarrhea, and it tends to occur in patients with low ascitic fluid protein (complement) concentrations and severe portal-systemic shunting.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: variant syndromes. 368 33

An autopsy case of clostridial gas gangrene occurring in a 54-year-old man with colon adenocarcinoma, liver cirrhosis, and diabetes mellitus is reported. The patient died 4 days after the onset of symptoms with episodes of vomiting and abdominal pain. Gangrene of both hips and perineum, hemolysis, renal failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulation were the dominant clinical features. Clostridium septicum was isolated from the subcutaneous tissue fluid. Adenocarcinoma of the ascending colon with ulceration found at autopsy was supposed to be an entry of the organism. Histologically, lesions of subcutaneous tissue and muscles were characterized by the absence of inflammatory infiltrates in spite of extensive necrosis. A summary of 35 cases of gas gangrene hospitalized to the Osaka University Hospital for the past 16 years indicates that clostridial gas gangrene patients with underlying diseases such as malignant neoplasm, diabetes, liver cirrhosis or immunodeficiency have a relatively poor prognosis.
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PMID:A case of nontraumatic clostridial gas gangrene occurring in a patient with colon adenocarcinoma, liver cirrhosis, and diabetes mellitus. 373 9

Thirty-four adult patients with portomesenteric venous occlusion (PVO) were reviewed. In 11 with hepatic cirrhosis, PVO was usually heralded by worsening ascites often with varix hemorrhage; mortality was high. Four with isolated portal block had varix hemorrhage without ascites. All of these patients survived despite recurrent hematemesis when portal decompression was not feasible in two patients. Eight others (5 agnogenic and 3 with hypercoagulability), experienced sudden abdominal pain with a clot typically propagated into mesenteric tributaries with ileojejunal infarction; survival was related to the promptness of operation and the extent of bowel ischemia. Of five patients with intraabdominal sepsis and pylephlebitis, only one survived. In the final six patients, PVO occurred with intraabdominal carcinoma. Five had progressive ascites, cachexia, and an early death. Imaging techniques included plain and contrast roentgenograms, ultrasonography, and for definitive diagnosis direct portography (operative or splenoportogram), indirect portography (splanchnic arteriovenogram), and computed tomography. Thirteen of 34 patients had ascites, and in nine of 11 patients examined, protein concentration of ascitic fluid was extremely low (less than 0.6 g/dl). Clinical presentation of PVO varies, depending on acuteness and extent of visceral venous blockade, severity of portal hypertension, auxiliary venous collateralization, and regional lymph flow. Inciting factors include endothelial damage and blood hypercoagulability from trauma, infection, stagnant circulation, blood dyscrasia, and malignancy. Improved imaging now allows early diagnosis.
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PMID:Protean manifestations of pylethrombosis. A review of thirty-four patients. 387 12

An unusual hepatic disease developed in 3 patients with a well-functioning kidney graft 16-24 months after transplantation. Vague abdominal pain, increased bleeding tendency and edema were initial complaints, and hepato- or splenomegaly and ascites were found as well. Liver function tests were not or only mildly disturbed; hemolysis and pancytopenia were always present. Colloid uptake was absent at liver scintigraphy and the hepatic venous wedge pressure was increased. Esophageal varices were demonstrated. Liver biopsy showed extensive midzonal and pericentral sinusoidal dilatation. After discontinuation of azathioprine the symptoms and the extent of sinusoidal dilatation disappeared gradually, but after 1-3 years fibrosis or micronodular cirrhosis had developed and splenomegaly with hypersplenism remained. These observations strongly suggest an association between chronic use of azathioprine and the development of venous congestion of the liver with sinusoidal dilatation, eventually resulting in chronic liver disease.
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PMID:Hepatic sinusoidal dilatation with portal hypertension during azathioprine treatment after kidney transplantation. 390 52

The clinical features of 77 patients with primary liver cell carcinoma seen over a nine-year period were examined. Eighty per cent of the patients had underlying cirrhosis, of alcoholic origin in most cases. In nine of the patients hepatitis B surface antigen was found in the serum; all nine patients were born in areas where hepatitis B virus infection is endemic. Abdominal pain and ascites were the most common presenting symptoms; they are due mainly to the locally invasive nature of the tumour. A confirmatory laboratory finding in the diagnosis is the observation of raised alkaline phosphatase levels and the presence of alpha-fetoprotein in the serum. The diagnosis should be established without performing a laparotomy and should seriously be considered in a previously stable patient with cirrhosis who deteriorates clinically without obvious cause.
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PMID:Primary liver cell carcinoma. Clinical features. 396 17

We analyzed the clinical and bacteriologic features of 12 episodes of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) in 11 children (four boys, median age 5.5 years) with chronic liver disease. All patients had cirrhosis and ascites; four had hypersplenism, and one was asplenic. Symptoms included increasing abdominal distention, pyrexia, abdominal pain, gastrointestinal disturbance, and encephalopathy. Nine had rebound tenderness on abdominal palpation, and 12 had reduced bowel sounds. The most frequent organisms isolated from culture of ascitic fluid were Streptococcus pneumoniae (nine). Klebsiella (two), and Haemophilus influenzae (one); blood cultures grew identical organisms in nine. Seven patients died despite intensive antibiotic therapy. In the 3 months prior to onset of SBP, defective yeast opsonization and reduced serum concentration of C4 were found in all nine children tested; eight had reduced concentration of C3. Functional deficiency of all complement components was present in four tested within 1 to 5 months of the onset. In contrast, only eight of 59 cirrhotic children without SBP had low C3, and eight had defective yeast opsonization, although 35 had low C4 values. Four of the patients with SBP and low C3 and C4 concentrations had normal concentrations at the time of diagnosis of liver disease 2 to 5 years previously. Opsonization of type III pneumococci was reduced in sera from three patients who subsequently developed pneumococcal peritonitis. The incidence of SBP in children with chronic liver disease is similar to that in adults, as are the clinical features. Our observations suggest that complement deficiency induced by chronic liver disease may be important in the pathogenesis of SBP.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in children with chronic liver disease: clinical features and etiologic factors. 399 46

We studied 34 patients with alcoholic liver disease presenting for the first time over the age of 60 years. Symptoms were usually non-specific including malaise (62%), anorexia (41%) and abdominal pain (38%). The most prominent sign was hepatomegaly (79%). Seventy-nine per cent of the patients had established cirrhosis at the time of presentation. For this group the prognosis was very poor, 48% died within one year of presentation.
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PMID:Alcoholic liver disease in the elderly: presentation and outcome. 400 82

A standardized clinical, laboratory, and histological assessment was carried out on 85 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis within 1 year of developing symptoms. Presenting symptoms included pruritus (n = 30), jaundice (n = 9), variceal bleeding (n = 6), ascites (n = 5), fatigue (n = 4), and abdominal pain (n = 4). Ten patients had symptoms not immediately suggestive of hepatic etiology and a further 17 were asymptomatic, the diagnosis being made fortuitously. Eighty four percent were not incapacitated and 52 were anicteric. Less than half were pigmented, 22% had xanthoma, and only 12% were deeply jaundiced. In contrast, all had significant laboratory abnormalities with alkaline phosphatase activity greater than 400 IU/L in 60% and IgM greater than 2.5 g/L in 75%. Mitochondrial antibody was detectable in 83% with a titer greater than 1:160 in 70%. Cirrhosis was present in 24 patients, nine of whom were anicteric and a further 11 had fibrosis or scarring.
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PMID:Early features of primary biliary cirrhosis: an analysis of 85 patients. 400 76

A survey was made to determine the incidence and to elucidate the manifestations of primary carcinoma of the liver in Alberta. The findings were compared with other reported series. Ninety-six cases were identified: 69 hepatomas, 25 cholangiomas and two cholangiohepatomas. Seventy-four of the patients were male and 22 were female, a male preponderance of greater than 3:1. Ages ranged from 7 days to 92 years, but the majority of the patients (58%) were in the seventh and eighth decades. The incidence of associated cirrhosis (38.5%) was lower than that noted in most series.Hepatomegaly, abdominal pain, weight loss and ascites were the outstanding clinical features. Gastrointestinal hemorrhage was frequent and second only to hepatic failure as the immediate cause of death. An abdominal mass and pleural effusion occurred in higher frequency than that cited in the literature. Associated disorders included peptic ulceration and cholelithiasis.Surgical biopsy was superior to needle biopsy in establishing the diagnosis. Laboratory tests and routine radiographs may be of diagnostic aid.
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PMID:Primary carcinoma of the liver in Alberta. 428 68


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