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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A retrospective was designed to analyse the mode of presentation, clinical signs and haematological and biochemical abnormalities in 225 consecutive Black (Zulu) patients who were admitted to a general medical ward between the years 1970 and 1981 and in whom cirrhosis was later diagnosed. The most common presenting complaint was swelling of the body (60% of the patients), followed by
abdominal pain
(32%) and episodes of bleeding, mainly from the gastrointestinal tract (19%). On examination, hepatomegaly was encountered in 66% of the patients, with moderate to massive enlargement in 40%. Ascites was detected in 56%, with tense abdominal distension in 34%. Jaundice was present in 38% and emaciation, mental disturbance and splenomegaly in over 25%. Spider naevi (found in 2 patients) and Dupuytren's contracture (found in 1) were very rare. Thrombocytopenia and a high ESR were common. Over 90% of patients had low albumin and high globulin concentrations (albumin less than 20 g/dl and globulin greater than 60 g/dl in 25%). Bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase levels and the prothrombin index were found to be within normal limits in 32%, 24% and 52% of cases respectively. Histologically the lesion was most commonly micronodular (73%) with variable deposits of fat and iron. Peritoneoscopy was the most useful special investigation in the diagnosis of cirrhosis, leading to a correct diagnosis in 77% of cases. In conclusion, the clinical signs, biochemical abnormalities and histological features suggest that the factors causing cirrhosis in the community studied are mixed; it may result from the combined effects of
alcohol abuse
, malnutrition and chronic viral (e.g. hepatitis B) infections.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation and biochemical abnormalities in black (Zulu) patients with cirrhosis in Durban. 707 88
Intramural hematoma of the duodenum is usually caused by blunt abdominal injury. Sometimes this lesion occurs in patients with coagulation disturbances or pancreatic disease such as chronic pancreatitis. There also appears to be a link with
alcohol abuse
. We describe the case-history of a 45-year-old male with chronic pancreatitis who presented with
abdominal pain
. The diagnosis of a space-occupying process of the duodenum was made and subsequently a pancreatico-duodenectomy was performed. The duodenum revealed an intramural hematoma, the pancreas showed signs of mild chronic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Intramural hematoma of the duodenum in a patient with chronic pancreatitis. 729 15
Forty patients underwent total pancreatoduodenectomy for end-stage chronic pancreatitis. There were 34 men and six women of median age 39 (range 21-66) years. Alcoholism was the major aetiological agent (30 patients), and five patients had had previous acute idiopathic pancreatitis. The overwhelming indication for operation was severe
abdominal pain
, complicated by failing exocrine and endocrine function. Resection was performed in one (17 patients) or two (23) stages, following previous proximal (seven) or distal (16) pancreatectomy; progression from partial to total pancreatectomy occurred over an interval of 8-96 (median 15) months. A further six patients had undergone previous pseudocyst or duct drainage procedures. The pylorus was preserved in 28 patients and the spleen in ten. Median operating time was 6 (range 2.5-8.5) h and median blood loss 2000 (range 500-16,000) ml. There were two hospital deaths and three patients required reoperation. Of 38 survivors, 30 obtained complete or substantial relief of pain. There were 15 late deaths at 2.5-120.0 months after operation, 13 in the alcohol group and 11 disease-related. Total pancreatectomy can relieve the intractable pain of chronic pancreatitis at the cost of possible premature death from continuing
alcohol abuse
.
...
PMID:Role of total pancreatectomy in the treatment of patients with end-stage chronic pancreatitis. 748 80
We investigated peripheral lymphocyte subsets in 34 consecutive acute pancreatitis patients (21 males, 13 females; mean age, 57 years; range, 16-85 years) studied within 48 h of pain onset and for 5 consecutive days to understand better the immunological response during the course of the disease. The diagnosis was based on characteristic
abdominal pain
associated with a twofold increase in serum lipase and confirmed by imaging techniques in all patients. Acute pancreatitis was of biliary origin in 25 patients, due to
alcohol abuse
in 5, due to pancreas divisum in 1, and of unknown origin in 3. Fifteen patients had severe illness and 19 had mild disease. In all patients, total lymphocyte and lymphocyte subset counts were carried out on admission, as well as on the third and fifth day of hospitalization, using a flow cytometric analysis. Twenty-three patients (13 with severe illness and 10 with mild disease) also had a repeat count 1 month after recovery. Twenty-five healthy subjects and 27 patients with nonpancreatic acute abdomen comparable for sex and age were studied as controls. On the first day of the study, the leukocyte number was significantly higher in patients with acute pancreatitis and in those with nonpancreatic acute abdomen with respect to healthy subjects, whereas the number of total and CD4+, CD8+, CD3+ DR-, and CD3- DR+ lymphocytes was significantly lower in acute pancreatitis patients than in healthy subjects or in patients with nonpancreatic acute abdomen. These subject counts persisted on the third and fifth days of the study.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Circulating lymphocyte subsets in human acute pancreatitis. 766 48
A case of acute pancreatitis with hyperlipemia and hyperglycemia induced by
alcohol abuse
is reported. The case is a 34-year-old man who was admitted to our hospital with a complaint of severe
abdominal pain
. He had been drinking 700ml approximately 1400ml of whisky daily prior to admission. At the time of admission, his serum amylase was elevated to 1833 U. Abdominal computerized tomography revealed edematous swelling of the pancreas. His serum glucose level was 926 mg/dl, cholesterol 754 mg/dl and triglyceride 3,530 mg/dl. Following successful treatment of acute pancreatitis and hyperglycemia with gabexate mesilate and insulin, his serum glucose, lipid and pancreatic enzyme levels decreased to the normal range. This case is considered to be one of acute pancreatitis with diabetic lipemia induced by
alcohol abuse
.
...
PMID:A case of acute pancreatitis with hyperlipemia and hyperglycemia induced by alcohol abuse. 801 72
When activated, lymphocytes secrete glycoproteins related to particular surface proteins, including soluble forms of the interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R) and of the surface proteins CD4 (sCD4) and CD8 (sCD8). We evaluated the release of these glycoproteins in order to assess the activation of the cellular immune system during the course of acute pancreatitis. Thirty-five patients with acute pancreatitis (22 M, 13 F, mean age 64 years, range 16-97) were studied. The diagnosis was based on typical
abdominal pain
associated with a twofold increase of serum lipase as well as morphological abnormalities compatible with acute pancreatitis seen at computed tomography and/or ultrasonography. The pancreatitis was of biliary origin in 22 patients, due to
alcohol abuse
in 8, due to pancreas divisum in 1, due to type IV hyperlipoproteinemia in 1 and of unknown origin in 3. Based on clinical outcome, 22 patients had mild pancreatitis, whereas 13 had severe disease. In all patients serum sIL-2R, sCD4 and sCD8 were determined on admission and daily for the following 5 days using enzyme immunoassay (EIA) techniques. Serum concentrations of sIL-2R and sCD8 were significantly higher in acute pancreatitis patients relative to healthy controls during the entire observation period, whereas sCD4 levels were significantly lower in acute pancreatitis patients than in the control group from the 2nd to the 6th day of observation. Serum sIL-2R concentrations were significantly higher in patients with severe pancreatitis than in those with the mild form of the disease, whereas no differences in serum concentrations of sCD8 and sCD4 were found between patients with mild pancreatitis and those with severe disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Behavior of serum soluble interleukin-2 receptor, soluble CD8 and soluble CD4 in the early phases of acute pancreatitis. 806 32
Bleeding pseudocysts respectively pseudoaneurysms represents a seldom complication of chronic pancreatitis in owing to erosion of pancreatic or peripancreatic arteries. The potential rupture into neighbouring organs or in the peritoneal cavity is accompanied with paramount life-threatening risks. During the last years we observed 3 patients with acute intestinal bleeding caused by pseudocysts converted to pseudoaneurysms. The goal of our report is to analyze the diagnostic tools and the management of patients with bleeding pancreatic pseudocysts, also well establish the clinical constellation, which is typical for this complication, the best diagnostic tool and the modalities to immediate control of the acute bleeding situation. All three patients suffered from chronic pancreatitis and
alcohol abuse
. The first patient had a known pancreatic pseudocyst, which penetrated through the gastric wall and caused a life-threatening bleeding. The second patient was admitted in owing to melena. The examinations yielded a pancreatic pseudocyst with hematosuccus pancreatis. The third patient suffered from
abdominal pain
and vertigo caused by anemia. With endoscopy, Cat and celiacography a pancreatic pseudocyst with cysto-colic fistula has been identified. The color-doppler ultrasound revealed a pseudoaneurysm supplied from a splenic artery branch. With management of these patients with hemorrhagic complications of pancreatic pseudocysts we acquired the following findings: 1. Patients with known chronic pancreatitis and abdominal tumor, especially when accompanied by epigastric pain and anemia, are highly suspicious for pancreatic pseudoaneurysms. 2. The color-doppler ultrasound is the best diagnostic tool, since this investigation can establish the pseudoaneurysm and identify the source.
...
PMID:[Hemorrhage from pseudocysts caused by pseudoaneurysms in chronic pancreatitis. Diagnosis and management]. 837 41
Only 15 cases of any etiology of Neisseria meningitidis peritonitis have been reported in the world literature since the first case in 1917. We report the first case in a continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) patient presenting with
abdominal pain
and cloudy peritoneal dialysis fluid. A lumbar puncture was normal. The patient died despite therapy with ceftriaxone. Autopsy confirmed this was a case of primary N. meningitidis peritonitis. Of the 15 cases of N. meningitidis reported as a cause of peritonitis, 9 patients were less than age 35 with no underlying diseases. Five cases were associated with cirrhosis or
alcohol abuse
. Two cases were associated with meningitis, and 1 patient was on steroid therapy for systemic lupus erythematosus. Nine of 15 patients recovered. In conclusion, N. meningitidis should be considered as another rare cause of peritonitis in patients on CAPD.
...
PMID:Neisseria meningitidis peritonitis in a CAPD patient: first case report and review of the literature. 853 96
The clinical spectrum of acute pancreatitis ranges from mild, self-limiting disease of fulminant illness that may rapidly lead to multiple organ failure and death. To identify factors associated with a subsequent severe course and/or high mortality we investigated retrospectively 91 patients admitted to the medical intensive care unit (ICU) with acute pancreatitis during a 2 year period. 67% of the attacks were mild (< or = 1 complication). The overall mortality rate was 9%, whereby 3% of patients with alcoholic and 13% with biliary pancreatitis died. 75% of the patients in the group with a fatal outcome were aged over sixty and 30% in the group with a mild course (p < 0.05). Females with pancreatitis of biliary origin had a mild course in 57% and a severe (> or = 2 complications) or fatal outcome in 43%. In males with
alcohol abuse
we observed a mild form of pancreatitis in 79% and a severe or fatal course in 21%. The delay between onset of
abdominal pain
and commencement of treatment in hospital was greater than 12 hours in 70% of all patients studied and there was no association with severity and development of subsequent complications. The median of the acute physiology and chronic health evaluation scoring system (APACHE-III) on the day of admission was 19 in patients with mild disease, which was significantly lower than in patients with severe (40) or fatal acute pancreatitis (53) (p < 0.0001). Serial APACHE-III measurements over 5 days after admission provided further differentiation between mild and severe or fatal cases (p < 0.0001), but no significant difference was observed between survivors with severe course and fatal outcome. In addition, RANSON scores were calculated for comparison with APACHE-III at admission and after 48 hours: concerning the recognition between mild and severe/fatal pancreatitis both scoring systems exhibited similar significant differences on day 1 and day 2. The RANSON scoring system provided further a significant differentiation between survivors with a severe course of pancreatitis when compared to deaths on day 2, whereas the APACHE-III scoring system did not. Advanced age, female sex, biliary obstruction and elevated RANSON and APACHE-III scores are risk factors for an increased rate of life-threatening complications in acute pancreatitis. The daily assessment of such scoring systems may allow the recognition of such patients and may be helpful in the routine clinical management and monitoring of acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Intensive care management of acute pancreatitis: recognition of patients at high risk of developing severe or fatal complications. 867 61
The zygomycetous mold Cokeromyces recurvatus was isolated from the pleural and peritoneal fluids of a 64-year-old man with a history of peptic ulcer disease and
alcohol abuse
. The patient presented to the hospital with severe
abdominal pain
and a ruptured duodenal ulcer. This is one of the few times that C.recurvatus has been isolated from a human source, and the organism may have contributed to the death of this patient.
...
PMID:Cokeromyces recurvatus isolated from pleural and peritoneal fluid: case report. 888 May 30
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