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

A retrospective study of 76 children with hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) who were admitted to the Alberta Children's Hospital in Calgary. Alberta between January 1982 and December 1988 was undertaken to explore the gastrointestinal manifestations of the syndrome. The children (mean age of 4.0 +/- 3.1 years) presented primarily during the summer months with a microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (Hgb 94 +/- 26 g/L), thrombocytopenia (platelets 87 +/- 83 X 10(9)/L), and acute renal failure (oligoanuria with a BUN of 26 +/- 15 mmol/L, and a creatinine of 294 +/- 90 mumol/L). Forty-three children required dialysis for 10 +/- 17 days. The duration of hospitalization was 17 +/- 17 days. Four children died of complications attributable to HUS. The following symptoms and gastrointestinal manifestations of HUS were noted: fever (33%), vomiting (80%), abdominal discomfort/tenderness (59%), diarrhea (100%), hemorrhagic colitis (79%), rectal prolapse (13%), colonic stricture (3%), colonic perforation (1%), intussusception (1%), indirect hyperbilirubinemia (49%), and elevated hepatocellular enzymes (58%). Of the last 29 children studied, 19 (66%) had elevated levels of amylase and lipase in the presence of acute renal failure, and six (21%) had a marked elevation of lipase (more than four times normal) with additional supportive evidence of pancreatitis. The additional supportive evidence included persistent elevation of lipase after the resolution of acute renal failure in four children, a marked increment in lipase in association with abdominal pain and an abnormal ultrasound of the pancreas after the initiation of oral feeding in a fifth child, and pancreatic exocrine and endocrine necrosis at autopsy in a sixth child.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Gastrointestinal manifestations of hemolytic uremic syndrome: recognition of pancreatitis. 170 51

The effect of abdominal rectopexy on bowel function is difficult to assess in retrospective studies because preoperative bowel habit cannot be determined accurately. This study examined bowel symptoms and physiologic tests of anorectal function prospectively in 23 patients before and at three months after rectopexy. Rectopexy eliminated complete prolapse in all and stopped bleeding in 16 of 18 patients. Incontinence improved significantly. Constipation (less than 3 bowel actions per week or straining for more than 25 percent of defecation time) was relieved in 4 of 11 affected patients but developed in 5 of the 12 who were not constipated preoperatively. Since the median bowel frequency was 21 motions per week before surgery and 17 afterward, the main determinant of constipation was straining. Abdominal pain was relieved after rectopexy in 6 of 12 patients but developed in 3 of 13 who were pain-free before surgery. Three patients (13 percent) had a first-degree relative with rectal prolapse. Perineal descent decreased significantly. Maximal anal resting pressure increased significantly, but this did not correlate significantly with improved continence. Twenty-one patients (91 percent) could expel a 50-ml balloon preoperatively; 18 of those 21 could still do so postoperatively. The two patients who could not expel the balloon preoperatively were able to do so postoperative. This study shows that rectal prolapse is associated with profoundly abnormal defecation and abdominal pain. While abdominal rectopexy improved continence, it may improve or worsen other bowel symptoms, including constipation.
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PMID:Abdominal rectopexy for complete prolapse: prospective study evaluating changes in symptoms and anorectal function. 173 83

A 9-year-old pregnant Standardbred broodmare was evaluated for signs of mild abdominal pain, failure to defecate, and mild abdominal distention. Rectal examination revealed the leading edge of a small colon intussusception, and peritoneal fluid analysis indicated suppurative peritonitis. Surgical management, including reduction of the intussusception and small colon resection with end-to-end anastomosis, resulted in successful outcome (1-year follow-up evaluation). Postoperative complications including dehiscence of the ventral midline surgical incision and simple obstruction at the anastomosis site necessitated a second surgical procedure. Small colon intussusception is an uncommon cause of signs of abdominal pain and is similar to type-IV rectal prolapse.
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PMID:Small colon intussusception in a broodmare. 335 76

Generalized juvenile polyposis occurred in five patients (age range, 18 months to 16 years). Clinical findings included abdominal pain, weakness, rectal bleeding, diarrhea, rectal prolapse, intussusception, clubbing, and failure to thrive. Laboratory findings included anemia, hypoalbuminemia, hypokalemia, and skin test anergy. Diagnosis is achieved by double contrast enema, endoscopy, and biopsy. Unlike patients with solitary juvenile polyps, patients with generalized involvement require surgical intervention. Subtotal colectomy and ileoproctostomy are the procedures of choice, and we performed them in four cases. An ileoanal-endorectal pull-through procedure was required in one patient with continued rectal disease. All five patients are currently alive and well. Long-term follow-up is important as polyps may persist into adult life. Family members are at risk for developing gastrointestinal tract tumors and should be screened.
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PMID:Generalized juvenile polyposis coli. Clinical management based on long-term observations. 370 30

Sigmoido-rectal intussusception is the least common type of intussusception seen in infants and children and is therefore usually misdiagnosed as rectal prolapse. Delay in diagnosis and treatment is due to lack of its awareness amongst surgeons, incomplete assessment of the prolapsed bowel at the anal orifice, and absence of classical traid of intussusception i.e. palpable abdominal mass, colicky abdominal pain, and bleeding per rectum.
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PMID:Sigmoido-rectal intussusception. 779 85

The pathophysiology of constipation after rectopexy remains unclear: acquired anorectal dysfunction or preoperative colonic state are, by turns, the supposed culprit. The aim of this prospective study was to characterize the colorectal motility abnormalities encountered after such a surgical procedure. Twelve patients (10 females, 2 males, aged 50.5 +/- 5.2 years) complaining of severe constipation or its worsening after Orr rectopexy (OR) for rectal prolapse were studied. Each underwent detailed interrogation as to their symptoms, left colonic manometry (basal and postprandial motor indexes and their caudad gradients in the sigmoid), anorectal manometry, evacuation proctography, and colonic transit time with radiopaque markers. Results were compared to those obtained in two control groups: 10 healthy volunteers (HV) and 12 patients complaining of a rectal prolapse (RP) observed consecutively during the same period of evaluation (June 90 to December 91). Before surgery, the OR and RP groups were similar with respect to mean age, sex ratio, weekly stool frequency, subjective dyschezia and manual anal supplies, constipation symptoms, and anal incontinence. OR patients differed significantly from the RP group in having a lower weekly stool frequency (2.5 +/- 2.2 vs 5.2 +/- 3.7, P < 0.01) and a higher prevalence of abdominal pain (7 vs 1 patients, P < 0.05). Above the rectopexy, global (135.9 +/- 38 vs 51 +/- 30.5 hr, P < 0.01) and left (61.6 +/- 10 vs 18.2 hr, P < 0.01) colonic transit times were significantly higher in OR patients; moreover, the basal motor index gradient was negative in all but one case (-94.1 +/- 101 vs 177.3 +/- 131, P < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Constipation after rectopexy for rectal prolapse. Where is the obstruction? 840

We report a case of "spontaneous" bladder rupture in a child with type IV Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome phenotype. The clinical presentation was unusual with abdominal pain, urinary retention and recurrent rectal prolapse. We could not find other similar cases in the literature. We to the possibility of "spontaneous" rupture occurring in this type of patients.
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PMID:[Bladder rupture in a child with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome phenotype]. 1002 89

OBJECTIVE: Enterocele induces pelvic pressure, obstructed defaecation, lower abdominal pain and/or false urge to defaecate in patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of abdominal colporectosacropexy in these symptoms, especially on pelvic pressure. METHODS: Sixty-two consecutive women with enterocele were included. All patients were symptomatic because they had: pelvic pressure (n = 62), obstructed defaecation (n = 40), lower abdominal pain (n = 8) or faecal incontinence (n = 16). Defaecography confirmed enterocele in all patients. The surgical procedure was performed by the same surgeon and was an abdominal colporectosacropexy with a nonabsorbable Prolene(R) mesh. After surgery, clinical evaluation (62/62 patients) and a telephone questionnaire (56/62 patients) were performed, respectively, 3 months and 27 +/- 13 months after surgery. RESULTS: Defaecography showed rectal abnormalities associated with enterocele in 59/62 patients (rectocele, rectal prolapse). No recurrence of enterocele was observed 3 months after surgery, but 1 patient demonstrated recurrence 10 months after surgery. Pelvic pressure was less frequent after abdominal colporectosacropexy, than before surgery (P < 0.01): pelvic pressure totally disappeared in 41/56 patients, and partially in 10/56 patients. The number of patients with obstructed defaecation, lower abdominal pain, or faecal incontinence was not different before and 27 months after surgery. The number of patients with urinary incontinence was also not different before and after surgery (30 and 27 patients). CONCLUSIONS: This study of a large number of patients with enterocele shows that abdominal colporectosacropexy improves pelvic pressure in most patients and does not modify urinary status.
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PMID:Treatment of enterocele by abdominal colporectosacropexy - efficacy on pelvic pressure. 1278 May 75

The disease of Mya-Hirschsprung (HD) it's rare and congenital, usually diagnosed in child age, but that it can also remain unknown until the adult age. It's associated to genetic mutations and it can involve other pathologies and malformations. The variability of the anatomopathological and clinical phenomena is correlated to the length of the aganglionic segment. The Authors describe the clinical case of one young female patient, who presented chronic constipation (less than 3 evacuations to week), tenesm, meteorism, abdominal pain. To the inspection of the anal region after the evacuation the presence of complete rectal prolapse (3) cylinders of the length of 30 cm was appraised, with presence of ulcerations of the mucosa. The patient came subordinate to diagnostic study that they demonstrated the presence of HD. The Authors operated the patient with the technique of Frykman and Goldberg. In the follow-up the patient had the complete remission of the symptomatology and resumption of the rectoanal inhibitory reflex, remarkable diminished in the preoperative manometric examination. The pathogenesis of the association of HD and rectal prolapse goes searched in the presence of ultrashort HD (aganglionic defect of a limited segment of rectum), pathological variety somewhat rare that can determine subocclusive phenomena and that it favors the prolapse of the rectum for the continuous evacuating strains.
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PMID:[Complete rectal prolapse in a patient with Hirschsprung disease: a clinical case]. 1466 84

Colitis cystica profunda is a rare intestinal lesion. Because of its clinical expression (rectorrhagia, mucorrhea and abdominal pain) and the way it appears to current imaging techniques this disease presents features which can be associated with colon neoplasm. Its diagnosis has to be confirmed histologically, and its etiology remains unclear. The following is a case report of colitis cystica profunda recurring 20 years after a first episode in a white woman, who had had an anterior resection of the sigmoid colon and upper rectum to deal with a colitis cystica profunda-induced stenosis of the sigmoid colon and at 41 underwent the transanal removal of a polypoid lesion. A review of 20 cases in the literature showed that colitis cystica profunda has a predilection for the male and generally affects the medial and lower rectum and the sigmoid colon. The literature also confirmed the association with ulcerative rectocolitis, Crohn's disease and rectal prolapse. The type of treatment varies from surgical, medical, and endoscopic to no treatment at all.
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PMID:Colitis cystica profunda of the rectum: report of a case and review of the literature. 1640 Jul 78


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