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

Acute fatty liver of pregnancy, or Sheehan's syndrome, is a rare complication of pregnancy, occurring in about 0.5% cases of jaundice in pregnancy. The anatomo-clinical picture and the biology of the condition is described using as basis a personal case history and the 28 cases to be found in the French literature. The condition shows, vomiting, abdominal pain and tachycardia in an apyrexial patient in the 3rd trimester of the pregnancy in which the disease occurs. The date shows itself a few days after the prodromal symptoms and is characterised by the triad of pruritus, jaundice and encephalopathy. All cases show an increased white blood count and hyperbilirubinaemia. If the condition goes on to become very serious one has to look for signs of haemorrhage and of liver and renal failure. Liver biopsy confirms the diagnosis. Prognosis will be improved if moderate forms are recognized early and if the condition is watched carefully. It may be necessary to stop the pregnancy before the serious conditions of the illness show up. Labour induced at the 37th week after checks had been made for fetal pulmonary maturity seemed to be a good way of treating the condition even if it has not yet become desperate. The final prognosis for the mother and the baby is always favourable if the baby is born alive.
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PMID:[Acute hepatic steatosis of pregnancy. Apropos of a case and review of the French literature]. 359 1

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), a fascinating disease that had been reported perhaps 50 times in varying guises over the preceding century, suddenly burst forth in the 1960s and was recognized in clusters of cases almost simultaneously in Paris, London, and West Haven, Connecticut. The spectrum of the disease has broadened. Initially, it was associated almost exclusively with alcoholic cirrhosis, but it has now been found in association with posthepatitic cirrhosis, cryptogenic cirrhosis, chronic active liver disease, and, occasionally, in biliary cirrhosis and cardiac cirrhosis. Recently, it has been reported in alcoholic hepatitis and acute viral hepatitis. It occurs occasionally in malignant ascites and in pancreatitis in the absence of cirrhosis. It is surprisingly common in disseminated lupus, in which it occurs relatively more commonly than in alcoholic cirrhosis. A similar syndrome, primary peritonitis, occurs frequently in children with nephrotic ascites. The clinical pattern of SBP has broadened. Initially it consisted of abdominal pain, fever, rebound tenderness, hypoactive bowel sounds, hypotension, encephalopathy, and cloudy ascites with large numbers of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in ascitic fluid. Each and every symptom, sign, and laboratory abnormality may be absent; indeed, the syndrome can be completely silent. Initially, the causative bacteria appeared to be almost exclusively enteric, but now the list of bacteria isolated in cases of SBP looks like a bacteriology textbook. Anaerobes are rare. Multiple organisms usually suggest nonspontaneous origin such as perforation or vasopressin induction. The differentiation between spontaneous and nonspontaneous bacterial peritonitis is crucial in the differential diagnosis. The great majority of cases of SBP develop in the hospital, 80% more than one week after admission. It is therefore a nosocomial disease that may be precipitated by procedure-induced bacteremia, gastrointestinal bleeding, or diarrhea, and it tends to occur in patients with low ascitic fluid protein (complement) concentrations and severe portal-systemic shunting.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: variant syndromes. 368 33

Two hundred fifty-five patients received chemoradiotherapy and a marrow graft for treatment of malignancy. Fifty-three developed venocclusive disease (VOD) of the liver. The clinical presentation was characterized by jaundice, fluid retention, ascites, upper abdominal pain, and encephalopathy. Insidious weight gain was the first sign of VOD, occurring a mean of 6.2 +/- 5.2 days after transplantation, followed shortly by jaundice. Twenty-four patients (45%) had a serious, progressive liver disease, but the others recovered a mean of 21.6 days after the onset of jaundice. Analysis of pretransplant factors did not disclose a significant association with serious VOD. Patients with serious VOD had significantly higher maximal values for bilirubin and SGOT, gained more weight, and were more likely to have encephalopathy. Supportive treatment did not appear to influence the outcome.
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PMID:The clinical course of 53 patients with venocclusive disease of the liver after marrow transplantation. 389 Feb 88

We analyzed the clinical and bacteriologic features of 12 episodes of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) in 11 children (four boys, median age 5.5 years) with chronic liver disease. All patients had cirrhosis and ascites; four had hypersplenism, and one was asplenic. Symptoms included increasing abdominal distention, pyrexia, abdominal pain, gastrointestinal disturbance, and encephalopathy. Nine had rebound tenderness on abdominal palpation, and 12 had reduced bowel sounds. The most frequent organisms isolated from culture of ascitic fluid were Streptococcus pneumoniae (nine). Klebsiella (two), and Haemophilus influenzae (one); blood cultures grew identical organisms in nine. Seven patients died despite intensive antibiotic therapy. In the 3 months prior to onset of SBP, defective yeast opsonization and reduced serum concentration of C4 were found in all nine children tested; eight had reduced concentration of C3. Functional deficiency of all complement components was present in four tested within 1 to 5 months of the onset. In contrast, only eight of 59 cirrhotic children without SBP had low C3, and eight had defective yeast opsonization, although 35 had low C4 values. Four of the patients with SBP and low C3 and C4 concentrations had normal concentrations at the time of diagnosis of liver disease 2 to 5 years previously. Opsonization of type III pneumococci was reduced in sera from three patients who subsequently developed pneumococcal peritonitis. The incidence of SBP in children with chronic liver disease is similar to that in adults, as are the clinical features. Our observations suggest that complement deficiency induced by chronic liver disease may be important in the pathogenesis of SBP.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in children with chronic liver disease: clinical features and etiologic factors. 399 46

A 13-year-old girl presented with postural hypotension, severe abdominal pain and diarrhoea, parotid pain and a transient encephalopathy. There was evidence of an acute autonomic neuropathy and some electrophysiological evidence of a transient peripheral somatic neuropathy. The likely cause was primary herpes simplex infection.
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PMID:Acute autonomic neuropathy following primary herpes simplex infection. 633 Mar 12

Eighteen patients with severe symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome were assessed for hepatic embolisation. Four were too ill, and one had mild symptoms; thus 13 received a periembolisation regimen of cyproheptadine, fenclonine, aprotinin, methylprednisolone, tobramycin, flucloxacillin, and metronidazole. Embolisation was not performed in one patient with an occluded portal vein and was unsatisfactory in two others, in one because she was moribund and in the other because the hepatic artery had been ligated. Dramatic improvement in symptoms occurred in the nine patients in whom embolisation was successfully carried out, with abolition of flushing, severe abdominal pain, and wheeze and reduction in diarrhoea from 10.5 (SD 7.6) to 1.6 (0.9) stools/day. Urinary excretion of 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid fell from 1048 (716) to 289 (184) mumol/24 h (200 (137) to 55 (35) mg/24 h). Complications included one death from septicaemia, a hepatic abscess requiring surgical drainage, abdominal pain in three patients, pleural effusion in two, and transient encephalopathy in one. Relief of symptoms lasted for one to 24 months, and second embolisation in two patients produced further remissions of four to six months. Five patients died, one to 40 months after embolisation, in four cases because of metastases or heart failure. Hepatic embolisation is the treatment of choice for symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome resistant to medical treatment.
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PMID:Role of hepatic arterial embolisation in the carcinoid syndrome. 641 93

The medical records of 31 immunocompromised patients who experienced varicella infections from 1975 to 1982 were reviewed. Fifteen of these patients had visceral involvement. In these 15 patients, two clinical patterns of progression were noted: (1) Eleven patients with life-threatening involvement experienced hepatitis (n = 11), pneumonitis (n = 11), abdominal pain (n = 11), encephalopathy (n = 10), coagulopathy (n = 10), inappropriate antidiuretic hormone (ADH) syndrome (n = 10), back pain or myalgia (n = 5), and myocarditis (n = 1). Seven of these patients survived, all without sequelae. (2) Four patients with a milder course experienced subclinical hepatitis (n = 4), mild pneumonitis (n = 4), postinfectious encephalitis (n = 1), and septic arthritis associated with disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (n = 1). All four of these patients recovered completely. In patients with severe involvement, intense abdominal pain was frequently the first sign of dissemination. Abdominal pain and inappropriate ADH syndrome were unexplained and have not been previously described in progressive varicella. A predictable pattern of organ involvement enabled starting therapy early and resulted in the survival of 11 of 15 patients.
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PMID:Varicella in immunocompromised children. Incidence of abdominal pain and organ involvement. 661 54

A 21-year-old Black male with painful neuropathy, abdominal pain, tachycardia and encephalopathy developed striking scalp alopecia 1 week after admission. Thallium poisoning was suspected and confirmed by urinalysis. The clinical course, investigations and management are presented.
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PMID:Thallium poisoning. A case report. 687 93

Subacute lead encephalopathy due a chronic poisoning was present in a 6 year-old child. Neurologic features (coma, seizures, CSF abnormalities) began after 2 weeks of vomiting, abdominal pain and constipation. Diagnosis was confirmed by studies of porphyrin metabolism. Lead poisoning following pica in childhood has rarely been reported in France. Its pathogenesis, main features, diagnosis and treatment are reviewed.
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PMID:[Lead poisoning revealed by severe encephalopathy : pica does exist in France (author's transl)]. 731 73

During August 1989-August 1994 at the referral-based obstetric practice of MacKay Memorial Hospital in Taipei, Taiwan, obstetricians saw 8 pregnant women with acute pancreatitis. All but 1 patient had gallstones and/or hyperlipidemia. None had ever been diagnosed with pancreatitis or gallstones in the past. None suffered from alcoholism. One woman was lost to follow-up at 33 weeks gestation. No pregnant woman died. Magnesium sulfate and nifedipine controlled preterm labor in 2 patients. Two women underwent cesarean section (fetal distress and elective). Pancreatitis struck all but 1 during the 3rd trimester of pregnancy. One woman presented at 23 weeks gestation with loss of consciousness, abnormally low volume of circulating plasma in the body, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and a dead fetus. She also had diabetes mellitus which had gone untreated for 2 years. After spontaneous delivery of the dead fetus, she developed metabolic encephalopathy, sepsis, respiratory distress, and acute renal failure. She completely recovered and left the hospital 62 days after arriving. Physicians instituted conservative treatment for pancreatitis and a fat-restricted diet for hyperlipidemia. Labor was induced in 3 women after determining fetal lung maturity. Pancreatitis symptoms diminished after delivery. At 2 weeks postpartum, they underwent cholecystectomy. In fact, all but 3 women underwent cholecystectomy. Five patients had a fever greater than 38 degrees Celsius upon admission. Three patients were jaundiced. All 8 patients experienced nausea and/or vomiting and abdominal pain. Six women had low serum calcium levels. Only 1 had a serum lactic dehydrogenase level above 350 IU/L. Primiparous women were just as likely to develop pancreatitis during pregnancy as multiparous women. These findings suggest that early diagnosis and prompt treatment of acute pancreatitis are essential to a favorable outcome.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis in pregnancy. 766 Jul 65


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