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

Between 1954 and 1975, 80 pancreaticojejunostomies were performed on 77 patients for intractable pain of chronic pancreatitis. All patients had a history of chronic alcoholism. Drainage operations done primarily for pseudocysts were excluded. Operative procedures included seven caudal pancreaticojejunostomies, 42 longitudinal pancreaticojejunostomies with splenectomy and implantation of the pancreas into the jejunum, and 31 side-to-side pancreaticojejunostomies. Eighty-one percent of the patients noted substantial improvement or complete resolution of their abdominal pain on follow-up that ranged up to 21 years. The operative mortality was 5%. Thirty-two patients died during the period of the follow-up. Continued alcohol abuse, carcinoma, and cardiovascular disease were the leading causes of mortality. Data from this review confirm the effectiveness of pancreaticojejunostomy in relieving the pain of chronic relapsing pancreatitis.
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PMID:Pancreaticojejunostomy for chronic pancreatitis. Two- to 21-year follow-up. 7 68

The efficiency of ultrasound in the diagnosis of pancreatic disease was compared prospectively with that of selenomethionine isotope scanning in 46 patients presenting with abdominal pain or weight-loss or with jaundice. Of 14 patients who later proved to have pancreatic carcinoma, all had an abnormal isotope scan and 13 had an abnormal ultrasound scan. Of 10 patients with chronic pancreatitis, all had an abnormal isotope scan and 9 had an abnormal ultrasound scan. The small advantage of selenomethionine was, however, offset by a higher false-positive rate: of 22 patients who proved not to have pancreatic disease, 13 had abnormal isotope scans compared with only 3 with ultrasound. Review of earlier experience with the two techniques yielded similar results: in pancreatic carcinoma and chronic pancreatitis, isotope scanning gave slightly fewer false-negative results than ultrasound but many more false-positives. Because of its lower false-positive rate, because it avoids ionising radiation, and because it can usually distinguish carcinoma from pancreatitis, ultrasound is the procedure of choice for initial investigation of patients with suspected pancreatic disease.
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PMID:Screening for pancreatic disease: A comparison of grey-scale ultrasonography and isotope scanning. 8 71

Acute pancreatitis of biliary tract origin and that of alcoholic origin may be difficult to separate on clinical grounds alone. Such separation is important since operation prevents recurrent attacks in gallstone pancreatitis. We examined the records of 78 patients in the first attack of pancreatitis from gallstones or alcohol. The gallstone group were usually women, older, and had a shorter period of abdominal pain. Pancreatic complications occurred more frequently in the alcoholic group and led to two deaths. Amylase values were diagnostically helpful in that a level greater than 1000 units in patients of the proper age and sex, and a level greater than 2000 units by itself indicated gallstone pancreatitis.
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PMID:The first attack of acute pancreatitis: a clinical study. 9 8

The history of a 27-year-old woman with 10 years of episodic abdominal pain and the development of calcific pancreatitis secondary to hyperlipoproteinemia is presented. The relationship between familial and alcoholic hyperlipidemia and pancreatitis is discussed as well as the mechanism of injury to the pancreas.
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PMID:Calcific pancreatitis in a patient with type 5 hyperlipoproteinemia. 22 44

We have studied a family in which three people, two child and an adult had hereditary pancreatitis. Hereditary pancreatitis is not a common disease. Abdominal pain is usually the first clinical sign in children. The knowledge of the existence of such a disease and familiarity with the family history of the child allow the pediatrician to make the diagnosis as soon as the first crisis appears. Surgery is thus avoided. Our studies show definitively that this disease is hereditary and is autosomal dominant with a strong decrease of the penetrance.
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PMID:[Hereditary chronic pancreatitis: an autosomal dominant disease (author's transl)]. 22 88

Intrapancreatic cysts were demonstrated by endoscopic retrograde pancreatography (E.R.P.) in nine patients with a clinical diagnosis of relapsing pancreatitis. The cysts ranged in diameter from 0.6 cm to 5 cm and were frequently associated with a prolonged elevation of the serum amylase level. The complication of intracystic haemorrhage with obstructive jaundice developed in one patient requiring early surgical decompression and drainage. In four patients laparotomy was performed because of continuing abdominal pain. One patient was treated by cystogastrostomy and another by cyst aspiration, but in two patients the cyst could not be visualized or palpated. Four patients were observed without operation for periods of four to 24 months, and all showed improvement or resolution of symptoms. E.R.P. was repeated in one patient and the cyst could not be outlined, while in another an abnormal barium meal X-ray examination result reverted to normal. Intrapancreatic cysts can be managed non-operatively, since complications appear infrequent and spontaneous resolution may occur.
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PMID:Intrapancreatic cysts associated with relapsing pancreatitis. 28 28

The reported complication rate from T-tube infusion of sodium cholate for dissolution of retained biliary stones is low. Among 84 patients reported in the English-language literature, and 10 additional cases of our own, there have been no deaths, an incidence of liver enzyme elevation in 7%, fever in 5%, cholangitis in 2%, and pancreatitis in 2%. Recently, we have infused 100mM sodium cholate at 30 cc/hr into patients through transhepatic biliary stents in an effort to rid the intrahepatic biliary tree of retained stones and biliary sludge. Appropriate precautions were taken to prevent increased biliary pressures by the insetion of a 30 cm manometer into the perfusion system. During four transhepatic infusions in three patients, all experienced nausea and vomiting, and two of the three patients developed diarrhea and abdominal pain. Liver enzymes became elevated during all four infusions, and two of the three patients became septic and died shortly after their infusions. Experimental work in animals suggests that intrahepatic sodium cholate infusion results in injury to the ductal epithelium and predisposes patients to bactermia and sepsis. Even though T-tube infusion of sodium cholate into the common bile duct is well tolerated, direct infusion into the intrahepatic biliary tree through a transhepatic tube is not and carries a high risk of sepsis and death.
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PMID:Sodium cholate dissolution of retained biliary stones: mortality rate following intrahepatic infusion. 43 6

A 43-year old man with CRST syndrome (calcinosis, Raynaud's phenomenon, sclerodactyly and telangiectasia) and progressive systemic sclerosis presented with a four-year history of relapsing abdominal pain, the result of chronic pancreatitis, not associated with alcoholism, biliary disease, or any of the known causes of pancreatitis. He had a good response to retrograde pancreatic duct drainage but exhibited management problems and complications that may be peculiar to the systemic sclerosis patient with pancreatitis. A cause and effect relationship between progressive systemic sclerosis and pancreatic disease is not proven but we believe there is evidence to suggest such a relationship.
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PMID:Idiopathic calcific pancreatitis, CRST syndrome and progressive systemic sclerosis. 43

Duodenum inversum is usually associated with chronic abdominal pain which is of unknown etiology. Incomplete rotation of the bowel may be associated with this anomaly. An unusually high incidence of pancreatitis, elevated bilirubin, and hypoalbuminemia was noted in this series of nine patients.
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PMID:Duodenum inversum. 44 63

Although it is widely known that patients with severe hyperlipemia may have pancreatitis, it is not generally appreciated that such patients may have recurrent abdominal pain of variable character and intensity not due to pancreatitis. Review of 35 patients followed in our clinic for 1--11 years showed that 54% had recurrent abdominal pain, while only 29% had pancreatitis. Although mild pain occurred frequently with plasma triglycerides in the 2000--5000 mg/dl range, triglycerides over 6000 mg/dl were often associated with severe pain and physical findings which necessitated hospitalization, often led to the misdiagnosis of pancreatitis and other intra-abdominal catastrophes and resulted in multiple unnecessary diagnostic studies and operations. When recognized, the pain subsided within 48 hours upon cessation of oral intake and treatment with intravenous electrolyte solutions. Furthermore, effective treatment of the hyperlipemia prevented both the attacks of severe pain and the pancreatitis which otherwise occurred (or recurred) in a significant fraction of the patients. These data confirm the existence of hyperlipemic abdominal crisis as a distinct entity and testify to the importance of recognizing this syndrome in order to avoid the occurrence of acute pancreatitis and the performance of unnecessary and potentially harmful surgery.
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PMID:The natural history and surgical significance of hyperlipemic abdominal crisis. 48 15


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