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

Pain of vascular origin generally reflects severe intestinal involvement and lesions that are rapidly irreversible. Diagnosis is difficult and treatment is often delayed. Such involvement should be considered systematically when confronted with any atypical abdominal pain, especially if it is intense and appears abruptly, in any patient with vascular disease or having cardiac rhythm disorder. At an early stage, the contrast between the severity of pain and the lack of general and physical signs should suggest emergency CT scan followed by GI arteriography for diagnosis and deciding treatment. If such measures are impossible, laparotomy should be performed. At the stage of infarct, the presence of an unstable haemodynamic condition and peritoneal signs require emergency laparotomy without paraclinical examinations. The severity of prognosis depends on the causes, the extent of lesions, patient background and the rapidity with which treatment is initiated.
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PMID:[Acute abdominal pain of vascular origin]. 1175 36

In two men aged 65 and 40 years with abdominal pain, the diagnosis 'acute acalculous cholecystitis' (AAC) could be reached only after exploratory laparotomy. The first patient was initially admitted to the coronary-care department because of known atherosclerotic vascular disease; he died a few days after the operation due to sepsis. The second patient recovered satisfactorily after admission to intensive care because of haemodynamic instability. AAC is an illness with a non-specific clinical presentation and incomplete radiologic imaging. AAC is more frequently seen in outpatients than in acutely ill inpatients, especially in older male patients who have atherosclerotic vascular disease. Diagnostic and therapeutic delay leads to gangrene, empyema and perforation, resulting in a high mortality. To improve the outcome, a high and early index of suspicion is needed. Hepatobiliary scintigraphy should be included in the diagnostic pathway.
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PMID:[Acute acalculous cholecystitis: not only in the intensive care department]. 1214 15

FDA has approved medroxyprogesterone acetate as Depo Provera Contraceptive Injection, effective for 3 months in preventing pregnancy in women. In clinical studies, the drug's failure rate was less than 1%. However, physicians must ensure that patients receive injections on schedule to prevent pregnancy. The recommended dose is 150 mg administered every 3 months by deep, intramuscular injection in the gluteal or deltoid muscle. Most women in clinical studies of Depo Provera experienced menstrual irregularities. As use continued, amenorrhea became common, reported by 57% of the women by the end of a year of treatment. Other side effects included weight gain, headache, nervousness, abdominal pain or discomfort, dizziness, and asthenia. Physicians should administer the drug only to women found not to be pregnant, because fetal exposure may lead to low birth weight and other problems. Recent data have demonstrated that longterm use may contribute to osteoporosis, and the drug's manufacturer, the Upjohn Company of Kalamazoo, Michigan, will conduct additional research to study this possible side effect. Contraindications are similar to those for other contraceptives and include undiagnosed vaginal bleeding, known or suspected malignancy of breast, thromboembolic disorders, cerebral vascular disease, and liver dysfunction. Depo Provera was developed in the 1960s and has been approved for contraception in many other countries. When FDA first reviewed data on the drug in the 1970s, animal studies raised questions about its potential to cause breast cancer. Since then, longterm controlled clinical studies in other countries have shown a risk of breast cancer comparable to oral contraceptives, and no increased risk for ovarian, liver, or cervical cancer. The studies also showed that the contraceptive injection reduced the risk of endometrial cancer. FDA approved the drug October 29, 1992.
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PMID:3-month contraceptive injection approved. 1231 15

Chronic mesenteric ischemia is an unusual but important cause of abdominal pain. Although this condition accounts for only 5% of all intestinal ischemic events, it can have significant clinical consequences. Among its many causes, atherosclerotic occlusion or severe stenosis is the most common. This disorder has an indolent course that results in extensive collateral vascular formation. Thus, symptoms occur when at least two of the three main splanchnic vessels are affected. Intestinal angina, weight loss, and sitophobia are common clinical features. Diagnosis can often be made by noninvasive methods such as computerised axial tomographic angiography, magnetic resonance angiography, and duplex ultrasonography as well as by invasive catheter angiography. Therapy of chronic mesenteric ischemia depends on the extent and location of vascular disease. Alternatives to traditional surgical bypass are becoming more common including embolectomy, thrombolysis, and percutaneous angioplasty with vascular stenting. Early intervention is vital as the natural course of this illness can be debilitating. Furthermore, this has potential to develop into life-threatening acute mesenteric ischemia with subsequent bowel infarction and death. Long-term studies have shown that the risk of developing symptoms from asymptomatic but significant mesenteric vascular disease is 86% with overall 40% mortality rate. The recognition and management of this unusual but important cause of abdominal pain is discussed in detail in this review.
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PMID:Chronic mesenteric ischemia. 1583 94

Thromboangiitis obliterans (TAO) is an inflammatory, nonocclusive, and nonatherosclerotic vascular disease. It commonly affects arteries, veins, and surrounding neural elements and is directly related to smoking. Although distal vessels of lower and upper extremities are the most commonly involved, other vessels such as intestinal arteries can be rarely affected. The authors describe a 41-year-old white male smoker who presented with abdominal pain for 3 months and developed an acute bowel ischemia. He underwent urgent surgery, and segmental enterectomy was performed. Histopathologic findings were suggestive of TAO, showing typical involvement of small-sized veins and arteries with intact internal elastic lamina, preserved media, a local nonspecific inflammatory reaction, with new and older arterial and venous thromboses associated. Although mesenteric arteries are seldom injured by TAO, this diagnosis must be considered when the usual causes of intestinal ischemia are ruled out. In this case, even without any other clinical symptoms of TAO, this rare diagnosis could be made.
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PMID:Intestinal ischemia as a single manifestation of thromboangiitis obliterans--a case report. 1632 59

A 66-year-old man with a history of abdominal pain, diarrhoea and weight loss was admitted for evaluation. Gastroscopy disclosed a severe gastric ulceration covering the lesser curvature. There was none of the usual risk factors for peptic ulcer disease and no malignancy was found. After 2 weeks' treatment with a proton pump inhibitor no healing was observed. The patient had a known atherosclerotic vascular disease, and angiography disclosed severe mesenteric ischaemia. After a revascularization procedure with stenting of the superior mesenteric artery was performed, the patient's symptoms disappeared. Healing of the gastric ulceration was observed at a further gastroscopy 2 weeks later. Chronic ischaemia is a rare cause of gastric ulcer, but should be suspected when no other cause is found and when the usual treatment with proton pump inhibitors does not result in healing.
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PMID:Ischaemic gastric ulceration with endoscopic healing after revascularization. 1653 21

The authors report a case report of rare disease interesting the digestive tract and often associated to the other gastrointestinal pathologies and/or pulmonary diseases and can be also associated to not gastrointestinal conditions such as collagen-vascular disease, transplantation, AIDS, use of corticosteroid and chemotherapy; other causes can be iatrogenic such as traumatic gastrointestinal endoscopy (a mucoses biopsy, a polipectomy) or the assumption of lattulosio; in 15-20% of cases the pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis is considered primitive. In the our case the Pneumatosis coli was associated to administration of acarbose; in international literature only four papers in the English language were reported. Our patient showed a strongly aspecific symptomatology and easily attributable in first line or to the pathology of base (diabetic patient) or to the assumption of the acarbose; from about 7-8 months she showed unexplained episodes of crampy abdominal pain, diarrhea with 3-4 defecations/die with semiliquid and normochromic stools, tenesmus and a not better specified loss of weight. The diagnosis was been performed by colonoscopy and confirmed by abdominal CT scan with water enema and histologically; we have used the traditional radiology only to exclude the involvement of other gastroenteric districts. The patient was been treated with O2-therapy associated to antibiotics treatment; the suspension of the causal factor, the acarbose, has been of not secondary importance; the complete resolution of disease was obtained after 15 days of therapy.
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PMID:Pneumatosis coli induced by acarbose administration for diabetes mellitus. Case report and literature review. 1697 79

Ischemic colitis is a condition that usually occurs in the elderly, as a form of vascular disease. However, ischemic colitis also occurs, though rarely, in healthy young adults. Moreover, food supplements containing Ephedra sinica or ma huang have been linked to adverse central nervous and cardiovascular events. A 40-year-old man was admitted to our emergency department after 2 episodes of abdominal pain and bloody diarrhea that lasted 24 hours. His medical history was unremarkable for risk factors of bowel ischemia, except for well-controlled hypertension. However, a weight-loss supplement, Ephedra sinica, had been prescribed for daily use during the previous month. Both abdominal/pelvic computed tomography and colonoscopy revealed findings compatible with ischemic colitis. His conditions spontaneously improved without any serious complications, and he was advised to discontinue the use of herbal medications containing ephedrine. In this paper, we describe a case of ischemic colitis that was potentially linked to the use of ma huang with a review of the relevant literature.
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PMID:A case of ischemic colitis associated with the herbal food supplement ma huang. 1858 1

Lymphocele is a well-known complication of renal transplantation. Presenting symptoms are nonspecific; most patients are entirely asymptomatic. Herein, we have reported a case of lymphocele due to an asymptomatic lymphatic Wuchereria bancrofti filariasis with deterioration of graft function. A 53-year-old man with end-stage renal disease secondary to vascular disease was admitted 40 days after transplantation with vague, isolated abdominal pain. An abdomen and pelvis ultrasound examination demonstrated a cystic structure in the renal hilus. Graft function deteriorated, so the patient underwent puncture of the lymphocele followed by povidone iodine sclerotherapy. In the percutaneous drainage, we noted a fine whitish strand 4-mm thick similar to the shape of the stent, a part of which seemed to go into the transplantation fossa. Parasitological examination showed an adult female worm of W bancrofti measuring 6 cm. The test for microfilaremia was negative. The patient was treated for 10 days with a combination of Ivermectin and Albendazole associated with Doxycycline. The collection rapidly decreased after worm treatment. This case describes a post-renal transplantation lymphocele due to asymptomatic lymphatic filariasis.
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PMID:Post-kidney transplantation lymphocele due to a lymphatic filariasis. 2083 94

This article reports a patient with intra-abdominal hemorrhage secondary to a rare vascular disease, segmental arterial mediolysis (SAM). The patient was a 68-year-old male who presented with chilling and severe abdominal pain. Abdominal computed tomography results suggested the presence of an intra-abdominal hemorrhage. Although visceral angiography illustrated multiple aneurysms in the branches of the hepatic artery, active bleeding was not evident. Conservative therapy including transfusion was performed, and re-angiography revealed the disappearance of multiple hepatic arterial aneurysms 8 months later. This is the first case of intra-abdominal hemorrhage related to SAM of the hepatic artery in which natural history of SAM was seen.
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PMID:A case of ruptured segmental arterial mediolysis of the hepatic artery: report of a case. 2223 60


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