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

Between 1954 and 1975, 80 pancreaticojejunostomies were performed on 77 patients for intractable pain of chronic pancreatitis. All patients had a history of chronic alcoholism. Drainage operations done primarily for pseudocysts were excluded. Operative procedures included seven caudal pancreaticojejunostomies, 42 longitudinal pancreaticojejunostomies with splenectomy and implantation of the pancreas into the jejunum, and 31 side-to-side pancreaticojejunostomies. Eighty-one percent of the patients noted substantial improvement or complete resolution of their abdominal pain on follow-up that ranged up to 21 years. The operative mortality was 5%. Thirty-two patients died during the period of the follow-up. Continued alcohol abuse, carcinoma, and cardiovascular disease were the leading causes of mortality. Data from this review confirm the effectiveness of pancreaticojejunostomy in relieving the pain of chronic relapsing pancreatitis.
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PMID:Pancreaticojejunostomy for chronic pancreatitis. Two- to 21-year follow-up. 7 68

A questionnaire-based survey involving 11,801 hemophiliacs from 54 hemophilia centers in the USA and Europe documented the occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in 10 patients. The crude rate of HCC was 3.2/100,000 patients/year, at least 30 times higher than the background incidence of this tumor in the countries of origin of the patients. All patients were Caucasians with hemophilia A, 39 to 74 years of age, and had liver cirrhosis. All had one or more risk factor for cirrhosis and HCC: 5 were positive for serum hepatitis B surface antigen, 4 had the antibody to hepatitis C virus, and 4 had histories of alcohol abuse. Serum alpha-fetoprotein, measured in 6 patients, was significantly elevated in 4 (range: 807-1399 ng/ml), and only moderately elevated in 2 (25 and 171 ng/ml). The onset of HCC was asymptomatic in 5 patients, whereas it was accompanied by jaundice, abdominal pain, or ascites in the remaining patients. Thus, HCC seems to be a more important secondary disease for hemophiliacs than formerly recognized. Since HCC is often asymptomatic, screening hemophiliacs with chronic liver disease with periodic ultrasound scans might increase the changes of detecting HCC at a stage amenable to surgical treatment.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in hemophilia. 165 Jan 34

This article review newer concepts of diagnosis and therapy for patients with acute pancreatitis. Although the pathogenesis are incompletely understood, much progress has recently been made in treatment of symptoms and medical support of the critically ill patients. The most common associate factors include: biliary tract disease (lithiasis), alcohol abuse, trauma and hyperlipoproteinemia. Most patients have abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting, fever, abdominal tenderness and hypovolemia of varying degrees. Renal clearance of amilase is increased, the ratio of renal clearance to that of creatinine is very important in patients with hypovolemia or an underlying renal disease. The definition of risk factors, with regard to morbility or mortality. Those patients at great risk require critical care treatment in an ICU and meticulous pulmonary, cardiac, hematological and metabolic monitoring and treatment of any the abdominal complications.
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PMID:[Acute pancreatitis]. 182 Jan 83

Pancreatitis is a common but rather poorly understood entity most often associated with alcohol abuse or biliary tract disease. Despite the availability of a variety of diagnostic tests and imaging techniques, the diagnosis of pancreatitis continues to be primarily a clinical one. Of major concern to the emergency physician is distinguishing pancreatitis from other, potentially lethal, causes of abdominal pain, and identifying those patients with severe pancreatitis who are at risk for a complicated course secondary to the remote systemic effects of the disease.
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PMID:Pancreatitis. 222 92

Spontaneous transmural esophageal perforation is a rare condition with high morbidity and mortality. It is traditionally associated with alcohol abuse. Experience of the syndrome at a large medical center in Israel, a country where alcohol is not a national problem, is reviewed, and eight cases are described. The clinical picture was varied and confusing, only one patient presenting with the classic triad of vomiting, chest pain and subcutaneous emphysema, though abdominal pain occurred in six cases. The diagnosis consequently was delayed (average 2.8 days) in three patients and two died undiagnosed. Contrast studies, when performed, were diagnostic. Early rupture (less than 24 hours) was treated with primary repair (n = 3). Late rupture (greater than 24 hours) was successfully managed by drainage alone (without esophageal exclusion) in three cases, but required long hospital stay (mean 52 days). Five of the six patients diagnosed ante mortem survived. Late reconstructive procedures were not required. The key to successful outcome is awareness of the condition, with early diagnosis and aggressive surgical intervention--repair or drainage.
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PMID:Spontaneous transmural rupture of esophagus--Boerhaave's syndrome. 281 19

Lead poisoning is uncommon in the adult population, but must be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with abdominal pain of obscure etiology. In this paper we present a 38-yr-old male with abdominal pain, a history of alcohol abuse, and exposure to the virus responsible for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The cause of pain was elusive until his occupation as a housepainter was appreciated. The diagnosis of lead poisoning then was considered and confirmed by an elevated blood lead level and symptomatic response to therapy. With the increase in renovation of old buildings, it is likely that the incidence of lead poisoning will become more common.
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PMID:Inorganic lead poisoning in an adult. 336 17

27 patients who presented with pyogenic liver abscess from 1957 to 1984 are analyzed retrospectively and compared with the literature. Diagnosis and start of therapy were frequently delayed because of the unspecificity of symptoms. Symptoms included fever, abdominal pain, weakness, and loss of weight. In 50% of all patients, the abscess was found by chance at laparotomy or autopsy. The most frequent causes of abscess formation were cholestasis due to extrahepatic obstruction and intraabdominal infections. Frequently a predisposing condition such as carcinoma, diabetes mellitus or alcohol abuse was found. The overall mortality was 25%, and was higher in patients with multiple abscesses of the liver (36%) than in patients with solitary abscesses (10%). With the introduction of new imaging procedures (ultrasound, computer tomography), the abscesses can be punctured under view and the antibiotic therapy can be based on bacterial analysis. The causative bacterial organism could be identified by cultures of the abscess fluid and blood in up to 90%. The bacteria identified usually were identical to the intestinal flora. Using specific antibiotic therapy, surgical treatment is often unnecessary and can be reserved for abscesses resistant to conservative treatment and for those due to correction of the original source of abscess formation.
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PMID:[Pyogenic liver abscess]. 376 87

Motor disorders of the sphincter of Oddi (SO) may play a role in the pathogenesis of idiopathic recurrent pancreatitis. We have compared manometric records from the SO in 28 patients with idiopathic recurrent pancreatitis with those from 10 control subjects. Patients with idiopathic recurrent pancreatitis had presented with episodes of upper abdominal pain associated with abnormal serum levels of amylase on at least two occasions, in the absence of alcohol abuse and biliary disease. Retrograde pancreatography was either normal or showed only minor changes in pancreatic ducts. A triple lumen low compliance manometric system was used to obtain a 5 min recording of spontaneous SO motor activity. From this recording were determined the SO basal pressure, SO phasic contraction amplitude, SO wave frequency and direction of wave propagation. The SO response to intravenous cholecystokinin-octapeptide (CCK-OP) 20 ng/kg was then recorded for at least 3 min. Twenty-five of the twenty-eight patients demonstrated one or more manometric abnormality when compared with data from the ten controls. The most frequent abnormality was an elevated SO basal pressure in 16 patients. In addition, excess of retrograde contractions in nine patients, high frequency of SO phasic contractions in nine patients, absence of phasic contractions in three patients, and paradoxical response to CCK-OP administration in two patients were recorded. This study has demonstrated a spectrum of sphincter of Oddi manometric disorders in patients with idiopathic recurrent pancreatitis and suggests that motility disorders of the sphincter of Oddi may be associated with episodes of pancreatitis.
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PMID:Sphincter of Oddi motility disorders in patients with idiopathic recurrent pancreatitis. 406 50

Drinking pattern as well as clinical, biochemical and histological findings were recorded of 282 males with alcohol-induced liver disease (fatty liver in 103, hepatitis in 61, cirrhosis in 118). The proportion of persons under 50 years of age was significantly greater with alcoholic hepatitis (70%) than cirrhosis (46%). Mean daily alcohol consumption was clearly lower among those with fatty liver than hepatitis or cirrhosis (P less than 0.02). Duration of alcohol abuse was on average shorter in patients with fatty liver and hepatitis than with cirrhosis (excessive consumption of less than 15 years was 61% and 62%, respectively, in the former, 28% in the latter (P less than 0.02). Symptoms and clinical and biochemical findings did not help in differentiating between hepatitis without cirrhotic change and cirrhosis. The most marked differences between cirrhosis and hepatitis, on one hand, and fatty liver, on the other, related to the frequency of certain signs and symptoms: upper abdominal pain, hard consistency of the liver, generalized jaundice, bleeding from esophageal varices and ascites; among biochemical findings they were: elevation of serum-bilirubin concentration above 34 mumol/l (2 mg/dl), lowering of the Quick values and of albumin concentration. Mortality rate during hospital stay was lower among patients with hepatitis but no cirrhotic change (6.6%) than among those with cirrhotic change (31.4%). While the prognosis under abstinence was relatively more favourable in patients with mild or moderately severe hepatitis, nonicteric forms require closer attention than has been given them so far.
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PMID:[Alcoholic fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis and alcoholic cirrhosis. Drinking behavior and incidence of clinical, clinico-chemical and histological findings in 282 patients]. 623 65

One hundred and forty patients with undiagnosed severe chronic abdominal pain who had not undergone previous biliary surgery were investigated by ERCP. A diagnosis was achieved in 34 patients (24 per cent) including 8 with previously undiagnosed peptic ulceration and 5 with gallstones. Twenty-five patients (18 per cent) had an abnormal pancreatogram, including 1 with pancreatic cancer. The incidence of pancreatogram abnormalities suggestive or diagnostic of pancreatitis was particularly high (60 per cent) in patients with a history of alcohol abuse. ERCP has a valuable role in the investigation of patients with 'obscure' abdominal pain.
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PMID:The diagnostic yield of ERCP in the investigation of unexplained abdominal pain. 682 2


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