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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors studied serial hepatic biopsies of five patients who developed hepatic failure following jejunoileal bypass for extreme
obesity
, with autopsies of two. The hepatic histologic changes included centrilobular or focal alcoholic hyalin, intrasinusoidal collagenosis, fatty hydropic degeneration, and neutrophilic infiltrate. At least two of the patients were abstinent from alcohol, both prior to and after the surgical procedures. The others, after the bypass procedures, had reduced alcohol consumption from previous levels. All patients developed hepatic failure and histologically progressive hepatic disease with alcoholic hyalin and other changes indistinguishable from alcoholic hepatic disease in 21/2 to 5 months, in spite of hyperalimentation and re-establishment of intestinal continuity in four. Nausea, vomiting,
abdominal pain
and ascites were prominent complaints. Four of the five patients died in hepatic failure. The authors conclude that these cases of progressive hepatic disease with histologic changes simulating those found in livers of alcoholic patients offer evidence that heavy alcohol consumption may affect the liver in an indirect fashion.
...
PMID:Post-jejunoileal-bypass hepatic disease. Its similarity to alcoholic hepatic disease. 4 97
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.
...
PMID:Intussusception of the excluded segment following jejuno-ileal bypass. 44 76
Small-bowel ischaemia is the least familiar cardiovascular complication of the oral contraceptive but is 1 associated with a high mortality rate and much morbidity. Hoyle et al have recently reviewed 21 cases and found that 1/2 the patients had died and 1/2 had required 2 or more operations, resulting in the removal of much of the small bowel. Small-bowel ischaemia occurs in women taking the oral contraceptive as a result of either mesenteric artery or mesenteric vein thrombosis. The dominant presenting symptom in small-bowel ischaemia, found in all patients, is
abdominal pain
. Some patients had associated nausea and vomiting; others complained of diarrhea. On examination the patient has usually been found to be febrile with generalized abdominal tenderness. Bowel sounds are present unless infarction has occurred. In nearly all cases reported the diagnosis has been made only at laparotomy, when the bowel was usually infarcted. Since many of the patients had had pain for 2 or more weeks, the condition might be reversible if it could be detected earlier. A diagnosis of small-bowel ischaemia should be carefully considered in any woman taking an oral contraceptive who presents with vague
abdominal pain
and has an associated condition known to predispose to circulatory disorders: cigarette smoking, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes, hypertension,
obesity
, or blood group A. If it seems like small-bowel ischaemia is the likely diagnosis, the contraceptive pill should be stopped immediately and treatment started with heparin.
...
PMID:Flap lacerations. 62 Jan 42
The case reported is that of a young woman who underwent a termino-terminal jejno-ileal by-pass procedure for
obesity
which was refactory to usual forms of treatment. Eight months later, a cholecystectomy was carried out for lithiasis, presenting with
abdominal pain
. At the time of operation, lesions of cystic pneumatosis were discovered on the excluded length of small bowel. This complication frequently manifests itself in the form of pseudosurgical
abdominal pain
, or as diarrhoea. More rarly, it is a radiological finding. The pathogenesis remains a subject of discussion. The mechanical theory would seem the most logical, since colonic intraluminal pressure is higher than that in the intestine excluded from the circuit. Bacterial proliferation, classical in blind loops, would be a farourising factor.
...
PMID:[Cystic pneumatosis of the small intestine following jejuno-ileal by-pass for obesity (author's transl)]. 64 80
This is the first published report in Israel of ischemic colitis in a woman using the contraceptive pill; 20 such cases have been reported in other parts of the world. The patient was a 46 year old married woman with 3 children; she had been in good health except for
obesity
and chronic hypertension. Her medications included an oral contraceptive for a period of 3 years, and methyldopa for treatment of her hypertension. She presented with
abdominal pain
and diarrhea of 5 weeks duration. She underwent surgical reanastamosis of the bowel and was doing well at follow-up 1 year after surgery. The presence of ischemic colitis was definitively diagnosed by histological examination; the differential diagnosis included cancer, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, and infectious disease. The authors note that although there is possible association between taking oral contraceptives and the appearance of ischemic colitis, there is not yet any statistical evidence for such a relationship. Similar cases have been reported among young women who were not using oral contraceptives.
...
PMID:[Ischemic colitis in a woman on contraceptive pills]. 84 35
A 12 year old boy is presented with choleithiasis and cholecystitis diagnosed by oral cholecistogram and intravenous cholangiogram and managed surgically with a cholecystectomy. A review of 667 cases of cholelithiasis in children is presented from literature, since the first report of gallstones in 1737, until 1975. It is showed that childhood cholelithiasis is a uncommon disease, occurring in all ages but (commoner) in preadolescent and adolescent girls. Etiologic significance of
obesity
, family history of cholelithiasis, pregnancy and history of previous abdominal surgery is reported. Haemolytic disease is an underlying etiologic agent in less than 19% of 416 cases reviewed. A high percentage of gallstones were visible on plain films of the abdomen and oral cholecystograms were diagnostic of cholelithiasis or showed changes highly suggestive of gallstones in 86% of cases reviewed. In a child with
abdominal pain
of unknown etiology, it is imperative to exculade the possibility of gallstones, and plain films of the abdomen and oral cholecystography are the best investigative techniques to do this.
...
PMID:[Gallstones in children. Report of one case and review of the literature (author's transl)]. 102 30
The most certain symptomatic manifestation of gallstones is episodic upper
abdominal pain
. Characteristically, this pain is severe and located in the epigastrium and/or the right upper quadrant. The onset is relatively abrupt and often awakens the patient from sleep. The pain is steady in intensity, may radiate to the upper back, be associated with nausea and lasts for hours to up to a day. Dyspeptic symptoms of indigestion, belching, bloating, abdominal discomfort, heartburn and specific food intolerance are common in persons with gallstones, but are probably unrelated to the stones themselves and frequently persist after surgery. Many, if not most, persons with gallstones have no history of pain attacks. Persons discovered to have gallstones in the absence of typical symptoms appear to have an annual incidence of biliary pain of 2-5% during the initial years of follow-up, with perhaps a declining rate thereafter. Gallstone-related complications occur at a rate of less than 1% annually. Those whose stones are symptomatic at discovery have a more severe course, with approximately 6-10% suffering recurrent symptoms each year and 2% biliary complications. The far higher rates of symptom development reported in a few studies raise the possibility that these incidence estimates may be too low. The best predictors of future biliary pain are a history of pain at the time of diagnosis, female gender and possibly
obesity
. The risk of acute cholecystitis appears to be greater in those with large solitary stones, that of biliary pancreatitis in those with multiple small stones, and that of gallbladder cancer in those with large stones of any number. Drugs that inhibit the synthesis of prostaglandins may now be the treatment of choice in patients with gallstones who are suffering acute pain attacks. Persistent dyspeptic symptoms occur frequently following cholecystectomy. A prolonged history of such symptoms prior to surgery and evidence of significant psychological distress appear to be the best predictors of unsatisfactory outcome.
...
PMID:Symptoms of gallstone disease. 148 6
Physicians examined 216 women who presented at Chittaranjan Seva Sadan College of Obstetrics, Gynaecology, and Child Health in Calcutta, India, and had undergone surgical sterilization at least 2 years earlier. Endometrial biopsies during the late secretory phase in the 32 cases with excessive bleeding during the late menstrual period found proliferative changes: dilated glands in 28 cases and poor secretory phase in 4 cases. The 12 ovarian biopsies revealed cortical stromal hyperplasia in 1 case. None of the control cases (i.e., those with no menorrhagia) had any ovarian changes. Observed pelvic pathologies included in the order of frequency: cystic ovaries, hydrosalpinx, uterine fibroids, pelvic endometriosis, uterine prolapse, chronic cervicitis, and scar endometriosis. Most of the 216 women were 25 to 35 years old and the youngest was 22 years old. Menorrhagia was the most common complaint (59.2%) and 30 to 35 year old women suffered from it the most. Among women who had no pelvic pathology, dysfunctional uterine bleeding was responsible for menorrhagia. Dysmenorrhea was the next most frequent complaint (29.6%). Intermenstrual bleeding, abnormally infrequent menstruation, and secondary amenorrhea were other menstrual disturbances (5.56%, 4.17%, and 1.39%, respectively). Other relatively common symptoms associated with surgical sterilization were
abdominal pain
(25%), abdominal discomfort and backache (14.8%), and whitish, viscid vaginal or uterine discharge (12.03%). Less frequent symptoms were
obesity
, painful scar, insomnia, irritability, depression, and regret. Proper preoperative and postoperative counseling would have prevented many of the complications.
...
PMID:Aftermaths of surgical sterilisation with special reference to menstrual disturbances. 153 7
We have reported 28 cases of pediatric cholelithiasis in our hospital between 1980 and 1990. We found risk factors in 15 of these cases (53.6%). The most frequent risk factors were hereditary spherocytosis, cholestasis and
obesity
. A high frequency of non-hemolytic cholelithiasis was noted. Lithiasis was a casual finding in 13 cases (46.4%). The most frequent symptom was nonspecific
abdominal pain
, which occurred in 8 patients. Diagnosis was made with echography in every case. The range of time in which the patients were followed ranged between 1-5 years. Eight children required surgery. Among the other twenty, twelve were asymptomatic and six improved spontaneously. The mean age at the moment of diagnosis was younger in the children that spontaneously recovered than in children with permanent lithiasis. Therefore, for this reason, we recommend an observation period before surgery in children younger than 3 years of age.
...
PMID:[Biliary lithiasis in childhood]. 160 11
This is a report of the fifth case of pelvic lipomatosis in Japan. A 52-year-old man presented himself in our hospital with a complaint of left lower
abdominal pain
on August 28, 1988. At that time, physical examination was unremarkable with the exception of mild
obesity
. The excretory urogram and retrograde pyelogram revealed left hydroureteronephrosis with tapering of the left lower ureter. Urethrocystogram showed an elongated posterior urethra with anterior displacement and elevation of the bladder. Computed tomography revealed excess of diffuse fatty tissue in the pelvic space with bladder deformity and rectal compression. Pelvic arteriogram demonstrated no neovascularity. A diagnosis of pelvic lipomatosis was established. He lost 6 kg by diet therapy. Left lower
abdominal pain
disappeared, but excretory urogram after eight months showed no changes.
...
PMID:[A case of pelvic lipomatosis]. 185 93
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