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

Information concerning the natural history of peptic ulcer disease commencing in childhood is limited. We have followed up 19 individuals in whom this diagnosis had been made in childhood 14-27 years previously. Strict diagnostic criteria were used. A high incidence of morbidity persisting into adult life was found. On investigation 9 (47%) had had a proven ulcer since entering adult life. Ten (53%) were no longer prone to recurring abdominal pain, but four of these had undergone vagotomy and pyloroplasty (three after the age of 21) for intractable symptoms. Thus, only six patients (31%) had made a lasting and spontaneous recovery. Serious complications had occurred at some time in the past in 10 cases (53%). Overt gastrointestinal bleeding had occurred in eight (42%), and this had been after the age of 18 years in three. Duodenal perforation occurred in one subject, and severe pyloric stenosis in another, both of whom were aged 21 years. One subject developed a penetrating duodenal ulcer at the age of 24 years. Seven (37%) had undergone surgery, and in two of these cases more than one operation had been performed. Fifty-eight percent of complications suffered and 89% of surgical operations performed involved patients of 21 years or older. These findings firmly reinforce the opinion that the disorder frequently persists into adult life. The impact of modern means of medical therapy, such as the H2 receptor antagonists, has not yet been fully evaluated.
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PMID:Peptic ulcer disease in childhood: long-term prognosis. 369 66

Abdominal pain is common among cystic fibrosis (CF) patients and may be caused by a variety of conditions. Although peptic ulcer disease (PUD) has not been emphasized as a common cause of abdominal symptoms in CF, the risk for the development of PUD may be increased because of abnormal physiology. Contrast radiography appears to be an especially inaccurate method to document PUD in CF because the duodenal mucosa typically appears nodular and distorted with poor definition of the mucosal folds. These findings may obscure or mimic PUD. The first endoscopic diagnosis of PUD is reported in a CF patient. Based on this case and a review of the literature, endoscopy is the procedure of choice for evaluation of a CF patient who is suspected of having PUD.
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PMID:Endoscopic detection of peptic ulcer disease in cystic fibrosis. 369 43

A 15-year-old boy complained of abdominal pain and massive upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Endoscopic evaluation demonstrated an ulcerated, submucosal mass involving the ampulla. This was locally excised and found to show the characteristic histologic and ultrastructural features of a gangliocytic paraganglioma. Similar lesions have been reported in 29 patients with a mean age of 55 years (range, 32-80). Twenty-six patients complained of abdominal pain or gastrointestinal bleeding, symptoms that mimic those of peptic ulcer disease. These tumors are uniformly benign, nonencapsulated, and submucosal. They usually arise in the second portion of the duodenum and are treated by simple excision. This patient is the youngest reported, and his case is presented as an illustration of an unusual tumor that can masquerade clinically and radiologically as a duodenal ulcer. The importance of endoscopic evaluation is stressed.
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PMID:Duodenal gangliocytic paraganglioma occurring in adolescence. 373 18

We performed upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in 60 rural Haitian patients who complained of chronic upper abdominal pain. Twenty-five of 37 men (68%) and 5 of 23 women (22%) had abnormal findings. In men the predominant abnormalities were severe duodenal ulcer, duodenitis, and pyloroduodenal obstruction; duodenal ulcer or duodenitis appeared to precede obstructive disease by about 20 years. In women the abnormal findings invariably were milder than in men and consisted of duodenal ulcer, duodenitis, and gastritis. These observations as well as the observations of others indicate that peptic ulcer disease is common in developing countries, particularly among men. We hypothesize that this familiar abnormality reported from unfamiliar places represents the ordinary spectrum of peptic ulcer disease, but that inadequate treatment of recurrent episodes over time leads to obstruction. Physicians need to learn more about the epidemiology of peptic disease in developing countries and to devise better methods of effective treatment to prevent the late complication of gastric outlet obstruction.
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PMID:Tropical peptic ulcer disease: an endoscopic study from rural Haiti. 376 May 17

The dietary and supplementary intake of food, energy, and nutrients were examined in 54 patients after various gastrointestinal operations and in 33 patients with gastritis, peptic ulcer, or undefined abdominal pain. Forty-six of the operated and 21 of the nonoperated patients had to avoid certain foods (p less than 0.001, chi 2-test), mainly milk, beans, cabbage and other vegetables, bread, and fried foods. Only a few patients got discomfort from coffee, fatty foods, and meat. The intake of energy was at the level of light physical work. The dietary intake of iron, vitamin A, and niacin did not reach the level of the recommended daily allowance (RDA). One-half of the patients used vitamins and supplements, which increased their intake over the level of RDA. It is important to inform patients before operations about the possibility of persistent abdominal symptoms after the operation.
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PMID:Dietary and supplementary intake of nutrients by patients with gastrointestinal diseases. 380 66

A case is presented of a 67-year-old man with chronic abdominal pain thought to be due to peptic ulcer disease. He developed nodules of panniculitis (nodular fat necrosis), resulting in extensive investigations for pancreatic disease. He was ultimately found to have low-grade pancreatitis associated with a pancreas divisum. Surgical treatment of this congenital anomaly resulted in complete resolution of the panniculitis and abdominal pain. Panniculitis as a manifestation of pancreatitis is well documented. However, panniculitis leading to the discovery of chronic pancreatitis with a surgically treatable ductal abnormality has not been previously reported. In cases of unexplained nodular fat necrosis, an aggressive search for a pathologic condition of the pancreas is indicated.
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PMID:Panniculitis associated with a pancreas divisum. 395 Jan 33

Chronic peptic ulcer disease is not generally considered to cause failure to thrive. We are reporting a 9-year-old child who suffered from chronic recurrent abdominal pain and failure to thrive. Investigation revealed that the child also had bacterial overgrowth and evidence of malabsorption. These findings were considered to be due to chronic peptic ulcer disease which caused intermittent small bowel obstruction and gastric outlet obstruction. Successful treatment of the ulcer alone resulted in catch-up growth and an end to the chronic recurrent pain. Recurrent abdominal pain when associated with atypical features or failure to thrive should be adequately investigated. Although rare, chronic peptic ulcer disease with its sequelae should be considered in the differential diagnosis of failure to thrive.
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PMID:Failure to thrive associated with chronic ulcer disease in a 9-year-old boy. 401 3

Heterogeneity is the most important consideration in the pathophysiology of peptic ulcer disease. Acute ulcers and erosions present clinically with gastrointestinal bleeding or perforation. If they heal there is no predictable recurrence. Factors concerned with mucosal defense are relatively more important than aggressive factors such as acid and pepsin. Local ischemia is the earliest recognizable gross lesion. The gastric mucosa is at least as vulnerable as the duodenal mucosa and probably more so. Most drug-induced ulcers occur in the stomach. Chronic or recurrent true peptic ulcers (penetrating the muscularis mucosae) usually present with abdominal pain. Many duodenal ulcer patients report that the pain occurs when the stomach is empty or is relieved by food, and follows a pattern of relatively long periods of freedom from symptoms between recurrences. Approximately 50% of patients experience a recurrence within a year if anti-ulcer medication is stopped. In most western countries recurrent duodenal ulcer is more common than gastric ulcer. Peptic ulcer disease is also more common in men. Recent evidence indicates genetic and familial factors in duodenal ulcer and increased acid-pepsin secretion in response to a variety of stimuli. However, it is also becoming clear that of all the abnormal functions noted, few are present in all subjects and many are clustered in subgroups. In chronic gastric ulcer of the corpus, defective defense mechanisms, such as duodenogastric reflux and atrophic gastritis, seem to be more important than aggressive factors. Nevertheless, antisecretory medications accelerate the healing of such ulcers. It remains to be seen whether prostaglandins, mucus secretion, or gastric mucosal blood flow are impaired in chronic ulcer disease.
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PMID:The pathophysiology of peptic ulcer disease. 405 22

This study tests a previously published decision rule for identifying nonspecific abdominal pain (NSAP). The rule, developed for ambulatory male patients in two Veterans Administration (VA) facilities and a prepaid group practice, was studied in an additional 110 VA patients and in 77 patients (predominantly female) from a solo private practice. The group of 58 patients (33%) classified as "low-risk" rarely had abnormal laboratory tests or radiographs, except for upper gastrointestinal series; 15 of these patients had potentially serious disease. Peptic ulcer was the specific diagnosis most often misclassified as NSAP. The accuracy of the rule in our population is similar to the accuracy of the judgment of experienced clinicians.
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PMID:A test of a linear discriminant for identifying low-risk abdominal pain. 406 35

Twenty-five cases of benign giant duodenal ulcer have been studied. In every case a barium meal examination showed an ulcer crater with a radiographic diameter of at least 2 centimetres. Abdominal pain was the commonest symptom but less than half of the patients had had pain characteristic of chronic peptic ulcer. Haemorrhage from the ulcer occurred in a large majority of them. The radiological appearances are described, and it has been shown that the giant ulcer may be missed through being mistaken for the duodenal cap or else misdiagnosed.It appears that the death rate in this condition has been falling but it is still high. The management of patients with giant ulcers is discussed.
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PMID:Giant duodenal ulcer. 498 52


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