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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of paraprosthetic-enteric fistula is presented and the total reported literature of 21 cases is reviewed. Paraprosthetic-enteric fistula is a complication of aortic revascularization with synthetic prostheses. The entity is characterized by erosion of the gastrointestinal tract by an underlying prosthesis but absence of a true fistulous communication with the aortic lumen. It is both a distinct pathologic entity and a step in the formation of a true aortoenteric fistula with suture line involvement. The most frequent clinical manifestations are
sepsis
and gastrointestinal bleeding, but nonspecific
abdominal pain
is present occasionally as well. The distal duodenum is the portion of the gastrointestinal tract involved most commonly. Diagnostic evaluation should include endoscopy, aortography, and barium contrast studies. Venous and femoral arterial blood cultures also should be done in patients presenting with
sepsis
. Treatment should consist of either graft excision with extra-anatomic revascularization or graft excision alone when dealing with a previously thrombosed prosthesis.
...
PMID:Paraprosthetic-enteric fistula. 30 May 10
In a 2 year period five patients developed pathologically proved ischemic bowel disease (IBD) following either renal transplantation or bilateral nephrectomy in preparations for transplantation. This entity accounted for 42% of all major gastrointestinal complications in this transplant unit. Three patients presented with
abdominal pain
and ileus, and two patients developed massive lower gastrointestinal hemorrhage. All five patients had nonocclusive ischemic disease because obstruction of a major intestinal vessel could not be documented in any case. Each patient was treated with bowel resection and three of the five patients survived. Although
sepsis
, shock, and large doses of immunosuppressive drugs have been implicated in predisposing such patients to IBD, these factors were not uniformly present in our cases. Blood volume redistribution with transient episodes of hypotension, especially during postoperative hemodialysis, may be significant. IBD in uremic patients can occur in the presence or absence of renal transplantation and may be the cause of massive intestinal hemorrhage in these individuals.
...
PMID:Ischemic bowel disease following bilateral nephrectomy or renal transplant. 33 53
In a kindred with a familial visceral myopathy, seven patients had operations seeking relief of chronic
abdominal pain
and other symptoms of intestinal obstruction; one patient had an 80% cystectomy and a Y-V-plasty of the bladder neck for urinary retention. Five patients with megaduodenum had bypass operations; a side-to-side duodenojejunostomy was done in four and a retrocolic gastrojejunostomy in one. Two of these died of postoperative complications, and one developed symptomatic adhesions. Two other patients who had duodenojejunostomy have done well for 6 years and 1 1/2 years respectively. One patient with dilation of the distal jejunum and proximal ileum had relief of intestinal obstructive symptoms from jejunostomy to decompress the destal jejunum. One patient who had a resection of the descending and sigmoid colon for sigmoid volvulus has done well for four years. Three of these seven patients developed peritonitis postoperatively, and two had symptomatic adhesions after operations. Duodenal aspiration from a patient who developed postoperative peritonitis grew E. coli, 10(13) colonies per ml. After review of the results of operations in other families and in our kindred, we favor side-to-side duodenojejunostomy in megaduodenum. Duodenal aspirate must be cultured before operation. Evidence of bacterial overgrowth in the aspirate should prompt appropriate antibiotic treatment to reduce the likelihood of
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment in familial visceral myopathy. 42 61
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.
...
PMID:Sodium cholate dissolution of retained biliary stones: mortality rate following intrahepatic infusion. 43 6
Necrotizing lesions of the colon occur in patients with malignancy. We identified 26 patients with cancer (23 with acute leukemia and three with solid tumors) who died from necrotizing colitis. Autopsies revealed three pathologic categories: pseudomembranous colitis in 69 per cent, agranulocytic colitis in 19 per cent and ischemic colitis in 12 per cent. Most died from
sepsis
. A comparison of characteristics was made with a control population matched for diagnosis, age, cause of death and duration of neoplasia. Nearly all patients in both groups had fever and were granulocytopenic secondary to chemotherapy. Most received antineoplastic and antimicrobial regimens during the month prior to their terminal illness.
Abdominal pain
and distention, stomatitis and necrotizing pharyngitis were frequently associated with colitis. Hyperbilirubinemia was a frequent late complication in those with colitis and the control group. Single and multiorganism
septicemia
were found more frequently in patients with colitis. As antemortem diagnosis was unusual, aggressive attempts at diagnosis are necessary to assess the true incidence of this disorder and the best therapy.
...
PMID:Necrotizing colitis in patients with cancer. 49 35
Acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis is a potentially lethal complication of biliary tract obstruction, caused by passage of septic material into the circulation originating from pus under tension in the biliary ducts. Of the three cases presented herein, decompression occurred spontaneously in the second one, and was achieved surgically in the other two. The diagnosis is based in Charcot's triad of:
Abdominal Pain
, Fever and Jaundice, with or without history of biliary disease. Progression leads to
septicemia
, shock and death. Treatment is surgical and it should be carried out as soon as the diagnosis is made. Effective decompression of the biliary tract is obtained by cannalization of the choledoccus with a T-Tube. Delayed treatment increases mortality, thus the importance of early recognition.
...
PMID:[Acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis]. 61 39
Twenty-eight patients with histologically proved pseudomembranous colitis have been seen in one hospital since July 1975. All patients with the disease had received antibiotics, six for infections not requiring operations; the other 22 cases all occurred after major surgery. All the patients had diarrhoea; six patients also had fever with clinical signs of
sepsis
, and three had
abdominal pain
thought to be due to anastomotic dehiscence after colonic resection. Pseudomembranous colitis was associated with white blood counts over 15 000/mm3 in 17 patients and albumin concentrations of less than 30 g/1 in 18. Pseudomembranous colitis was an incidental finding at necropsy in two of six patients who had not had an operation. Of the 22 patients who had had major surgery, nine died from this complication; in all except two of these cases the diagnosis was made only at necropsy. If pseudomembranous colitis is suspected on clinical grounds or if there is an unexplained complication after colorectal surgery repeat sigmoidoscopy and testing for faecal toxins should be carried out to establish the diagnosis so that prompt supportive treatment can be given.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of pseudomembranous colitis. 63 Feb 92
In three cases of pancreaticocolonic fistula presenting before the stage of exsanguinating hemorrhage of severe
sepsis
the problem was diagnosed on the basis of the clinical history, visualization of the terminal part of the fistula by roentgenography after a barium enema had been given and, in two cases, demonstration of the communication with the pancreatic ductal system by endoscopic retrograde pancreatography. The lesions were repaired surgically. Pancreaticocolonic fistula should be suspected in a patient with upper
abdominal pain
who has a history of
abdominal pain
and excessive alcohol consumption and in whom diarrhea and fever, hematochezia or a disappearing abdominal mass develops. Characteristically barium will collect in the terminal part of the fistula and thus permit a tentative diagnosis; the diagnosis can then be confirmed by endoscopic retrograde pancreatography. With this approach surgical treatment can be carried out earlier and the often fatal course of the disorder can be averted.
...
PMID:Pancreaticocolonic fistula: a complication of pancreatitis. 70 71
Sequential chemotherapeutic regimens, primarily used in the treatment of hematopoietic malignancies, and employing ara-C as a basic antineoplastic agent induce mucosal alterations in the entire gastrointestinal tract. These are characterized by surface and glandular epithelial atypia, immaturity, and necrosis. Glandular regeneration is characteristically delayed leading to a state of intestinal aproliferative cytopenia. Other toxic intestinal changes include telangiectasia of blood vessels and the formation of intramural hematomas. Intestinal infections develop frequently and are complicated by peritonitis, liver abscesses, pneumatosis cystoides in testinalis and
sepsis
. These intestinal lesions are accompanied by a predictable clinical syndrome which begins concomitantly with ara-C infusions and is characterized by diarrhea, ileus,
abdominal pain
, hematemesis and melena, severe hypokalemia, hypocalcemia and a protein-losing enteropathy. Additional toxic manifestations induced by ara-C include transient weight gains, fever elevations and severe bone marrow depression. The genesis of the intestinal lesions is linked to the three day dose schedule of ara-C infusions which insures both arrest of the cycling intestinal cells in the S-phase and a high cytotoxic index. The severity of these lesions is markedly augmented by prior treatment with ara-C and cyclophosphamide which causes synchronization and probable recruitment of intestinal stem cells, respectively.
...
PMID:Cytosine arabinoside induced gastrointestinal toxic alterations in sequential chemotherapeutic protocols: a clinical-pathologic study of 33 patients. 70 32
Five cases of childhood pyogenic hepatic abscess at Milwaukee Children's Hospital and 61 cases in the literature were reviewed. Hepatic abscess occurred most often in infants who had
sepsis
or umbilical infection. Cases in older children were associated with underlying host defense defects, particularly chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) and leukemia. Common clinical findings were fever,
abdominal pain
and hepatomegaly. Radionuclide scan was useful in diagnosis of lesions larger than 2 cm. Small or microscopic lesions were diagnosed at autopsy. Staphylococcus aureus was the most common etiologic agent. Mortality in all evaluable cases was 27% in patients with CGD and 42% in those without CGD. Open drainage and appropriate antibiotic therapy is the treatment of choice and should lower the mortality of this infection.
...
PMID:Pyogenic hepatic abscess in infancy and childhood. 71 87
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