Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-eight proved cases of
typhoid
and paratyphoid fever were reviewed in a retrospective study covering 5 years (1986-1990). Patients within the age range of 10 to 39 years constituted 82.3 per cent of cases and there was equal incidence in both sexes. The mean duration of illness before presentation was 9.67 days. The major clinical features were fever (97%), abdominal tenderness (-9.4%), headache and
abdominal pain
(70.58%) each). Intestinal perforation was the commonest complication (27.9%) with a male preponderance (M:F-3:1). Perforation occurred after the first week of illness in 73.7 per cent of cases. Fourteen out of the nineteen patients who perforated were not on therapy at the time of perforation and they constituted 80 per cent of those cases of mortality in which perforation played a role. Surgical management of perforation gave better results than conservative management (mortality rates of 16.7% and 40% respectively). Salmonella was sensitive to Chloramphenicol in all the cases where the organism was grown. There were 10 recorded deaths (14.9%) of whom 60 per cent (i. e. 6 patients) presented after two weeks of illness.
...
PMID:Typhoid and paratyphoid fever: a retrospective study. 141
Due to mass tourism and the exodus of refugees from Africa and Asia,
typhoid fever
, common in the tropics, has reappeared in the more temperate climates. The clinical signs of prolonged fever, headache, general malaise, anorexia and
abdominal pain
are not specific enough to allow diagnosis and only a blood culture will prove the presence of the disease. Unless there is resistance, which is in fact rare in Southeast Asia, chloramphenicol, an effective, well tolerated and cheap antibiotic, remains the treatment of choice for
typhoid
. In the search for an alternative treatment a cephalosporin, ceftriaxone (Rocephin) seems promising. It has a low MIC of 0.05 micrograms/ml for S. typhi and a high level of biliary excretion which destroys S. typhi in the bile and thus prevents relapse. In Southeast Asia three consecutive studies, of which two were randomised and comparative with chloramphenicol given for 14 days, showed that treatment for two or three days, 3 or 4 g per day of ceftriaxone was as effective as chloramphenicol and was not followed by relapse. In 46 adults there was one failure with ceftriaxone (in an immunocompromised patient) and none in the 30 patients treated with chloramphenicol, three of which, however, relapsed in the 15 days after completion of treatment. Defervescence was a little more rapid with chloramphenicol (six to seven days) than with ceftriaxone (seven to ten days) even though blood, urine and stool cultures were all negative from the third or fourth day of treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Treatment of typhoid fever for three days with ceftriaxone]. 228
Of the 257
typhoid
enteric perforations analysed at the Departments of General and Paediatric Surgery, Ankara University Hospital, through the years 1979-1986, 74.9% were males, while the patients mean age was 35.8 years. The early signs and symptoms averaged 5.9 days. The corresponding percentages for the occurrence of
abdominal pain
, fever, nausea and vomiting and central nervous system disorders which constituted the clinical findings were 97.27, 51, 61.2 and 18 respectively. While the mean value for the white blood count ranged around 6600, only 61.9% of the cases had diagnostic findings in their erect abdominal roentgenograms. The standard method for the treatment of
typhoid
enteric perforations is still presently primary suturing of the perforated viscus and peritoneal drainage. Despite the use and misuse of a large variety of antibiotics,
typhoid
perforations still have a high morbidity of 74.1% and a mortality of 31.4%. Generalized peritonitis (78.4%), is considered to be to the most important cause in both situations.
...
PMID:A contemporary evaluation of enteric perforations in typhoid fever: analysis of 257 cases. 237 98
Experience with
typhoid fever
in 111 children over a 5-year period was reviewed. There were 66 boys and 45 girls, ranging in age from 1 to 11.5 years. The symptoms of
typhoid fever
were quite non-specific. Fever was the most common presenting symptom (in 98.3%). Other common presenting features were diarrhoea (25.7%), constipation (22%), vomiting (21.1%), cough (25%),
abdominal pain
(27.5%), headache (9.2%), epistaxis, meningism and convulsions. Rose spots were detected in 20% of cases, occurring mainly during the first 2 weeks of illness. Significant Widal reactions were present in 84.7% of cases. Blood and stool cultures were positive in 57% and 44% of cases, respectively. Peripheral blood white cell counts were not found to be of great diagnostic value. Chloramphenicol remained the drug of choice in the treatment of
typhoid fever
. It was more effective than ampicillin or co-trimoxazole. Complications were uncommon, occurring in only two patients. There were two deaths; both were admitted late and in moribund state. Early diagnosis and treatment is vital in
typhoid fever
and, as the presenting features are non-specific, a high index of suspicion is required.
...
PMID:Typhoid fever in Hong Kong children. 278 7
A retrospective review of 108 consecutive patients with perforated
typhoid
enteritis managed operatively over a 4-year period at Baptist Medical Centre, Ogbomoso, Nigeria is presented. There were 75 males and 33 females with an average age of 19.7 years. Presenting symptoms were fever,
abdominal pain
, vomiting, and either diarrhea or constipation. One hundred patients (93 percent) underwent debridement of the perforation and two-layer bowel closure. Postoperative morbidity included intraabdominal abscess, wound dehiscence, and subsequent bowel perforation. Most of the 35 deaths (32 percent mortality) were attributed to overwhelming sepsis which progressed despite aggressive operative management and antibiotic administration. The key to improved survival in this deadly disease lies not in a better operation or improved perioperative care but in the prevention of
typhoid fever
by providing safe drinking water and improved sanitation methods for all of the global community.
...
PMID:Perforated typhoid enteritis: operative experience with 108 cases. 292 66
Eight cases of abdominal tuberculosis from the Department of Medicine, Singapore General Hospital are reported to illustrate the varied clinical manifestations of the disease. Presentation ranged from asymptomatic hepatomegaly to acute abdomen (intestinal obstruction/perforation). Chronic non-specific symptomatology (fever, weight loss,
abdominal pain
, diarrhoea, jaundice) was commonest. There were three patients with hepatic tuberculosis, two with tuberculous mesenteric lymphadenitis and three with intestinal tuberculosis, two of whom had concomitant tuberculous peritonitis. Only three patients had coexisting pulmonary tuberculosis. The diagnosis was unsuspected at presentation in four patients. Initial provisional diagnoses included
typhoid
, abdominal lymphoma, hepatic malignancy, chronic hepatitis and iatrogenic gut perforation. All patients responded totally to conventional antituberculous therapy.
...
PMID:The varied manifestations of abdominal tuberculosis. 343 16
We reviewed the case notes of 23 adult patients infected with Salmonella typhi and admitted to the infectious disease unit, Auckland Hospital between January 1977 and December 1984. Fifteen had
typhoid fever
and eight were chronic carriers of S typhi. All isolates were sensitive to amoxycillin, chloramphenicol and cotrimoxazole. Ten of those with
typhoid fever
had recently been in tropical countries, predominantly Pacific Islands. The remaining five all lived in South Auckland and had not travelled out of New Zealand: we suspect that contaminated shellfish collected from the Manukau Harbour in South Auckland were the source.
Typhoid fever
should be suspected in young travellers returning to New Zealand with fever, diarrhoea,
abdominal pain
and headache. Similarly this diagnosis should be suspected in Polynesians and Maoris from South Auckland who have not travelled. All but one patient with
typhoid fever
responded clinically to the initial regimen which was usually oral amoxycillin given for a median 18 days. One other patient relapsed. Cholescystectomy and subsequent oral antibacterials eradicated S typhi from five biliary carriers with abnormal gallbladders. Prolonged high dose oral amoxycillin alone was effective in one of two carrier patients with normal gallbladders. The role of the Department of Health in identifying carriers of S typhi remains important.
...
PMID:Salmonella typhi infection in adults is not limited to travellers returning from the tropics. 346 68
An outbreak of
typhoid fever
occurred among 54 hospital nurses after a picnic. The salient features were fever (100%), nausea and vomiting (46%), loose motions and
abdominal pain
(13%), and palpable splenomegaly (63%). None of the patients had any major complications. Blood cultures for Salmonella typhi were positive in 81%, blood Widal was positive (1:320 or more) in 43% and suggestive (1:160) in 25% of the blood culture positive patients. A comparable number of patients were administered chloramphenicol or co-trimoxazole and no differences in response were observed. Bacteriological examination of samples of water from the likely sources revealed it to be unfit for human consumption due to gross faecal contamination.
...
PMID:An outbreak of typhoid fever in Chandigarh, North India. 348 47
Some aspects of
typhoid fever
in 77 children are discussed. There were 48 boys and 29 girls and their ages ranged from 1 month to 12 years. The patients were treated with chloramphenicol 100 mg/kg/d during the first 2 weeks and with either amoxycillin (100 mg/kg/d) or ampicillin (200 mg/kg/d) during the third week. The average duration of fever was 5.2 days. There was 1 relapse and 1 child, a baby aged 1 month, died. The correct diagnosis was not suspected by the referring doctor in 38% of the patients. On admission the commonest complaints were fever,
abdominal pain
, diarrhoea, headache and vomiting. The commonest findings on examination were tenderness or distension of the abdomen, apathy or delirium, rhonchi or crepitations, liver enlargement and meningism. There was anaemia (Hb less than 10 g/dl) in 23% and lymphopenia (less than 1500/microliter) in 43% of the patients. The differential white blood cell count revealed 5% or more unsegmented neutrophils in 32% of the patients, while 25% had 10% or more band cells. Two patients (sisters) failed to respond after 15 and 16 days of therapy with chloramphenicol and ampicillin because of resistant Salmonella typhi and were successfully treated with co-trimoxazole. Practitioners caring for black patients should always be on the alert for
typhoid fever
; some patients may not respond to chloramphenicol or amoxicillin. During the acute phase milk feeds are best replaced by soya products because of abdominal distension or aggravation of diarrhoea by milk.
...
PMID:[Aspects of typhoid fever in children]. 376 9
A total of 592 children with clinical diagnosis of
typhoid fever
admitted to the Dr B. C. Roy Memorial Hospital for Children, Calcutta, India during the period between February 1990 and January 1992, were screened for Salmonella typhi by blood culture. S. typhi was isolated from 221 (37.3%) cases. The majority of the strains (92.3%) showed multi-drug resistant (MDR). They were resistant to chloramphenicol, ampicillin, tetracycline and trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole. However, all the strains were uniformly (100%) susceptible to gentamicin, amikacin, furazolidone, norfloxacin and ciprofloxacin. Minimum inhibitory concentration of the antimicrobial agents against the resistant strains of S. typhi ranged between 200 and > 1600 micrograms/ml. Phage type 0 was most frequently encountered. The rate of isolation of S. typhi was more or less the same in all the pediatric age groups. The majority of the cases came from lower socio-economic classes with poor personal hygiene. Fever was the main presenting feature in all the cases. Other associated features of the MDR
typhoid fever
cases, who were uncomplicated during admission, were headache (36.0%), chill and rigor (23.2%), diarrhea (37.2%), anorexia (26.2%), vomiting (23.8%), cough (18.0%) and
abdominal pain
(19.8%). Hepatosplenomegaly was present in 42.4% cases. However, complications were less frequently encountered among the MDR
typhoid fever
cases who were uncomplicated during admission and treated as in-patients. Fourteen bacteriologically-confirmed MDR
typhoid fever
cases had jaundice and another 18 cases had an abnormal state of consciousness during admission. Four (2.0%) bacteriologically-confirmed MDR
typhoid fever
patients died during the period of observation.
...
PMID:Multi-drug resistant typhoid fever in hospitalised children. Clinical, bacteriological and epidemiological profiles. 795 89
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>