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

Acute cholecystitis is a common cause of emergency room admissions in elderly patients, and may have an atypical course with serious complications and high mortality. The authors present 131 elderly patients (aged 70 and older) who were treated for acute cholecystitis. The most common complaint was right upper abdominal pain (73%), followed by fever (55%), vomiting (48%), palpable mass (22%) and jaundice (13%). Twelve per cent of the patients were in septic shock on admission. Most patients (74%) had severe concomitant disease, increasing their operative risk significantly. Patients were prepared for surgery by hydration, nasogastric drainage, and antibiotics, while imaging was performed. They were all operated on within 48 hours. The operation of choice was cholecystectomy, which was performed in 86 patients. In 45 older and high risk patients, cholecystostomy was performed. The decision to perform cholecystostomy was taken prior to the operation, and was based on the estimated operative risk. Five patients (3.8%) died postoperatively. The major cause of death was cardiovascular disorders. Major complications occurred in 14.5 per cent and minor in 23 per cent of the patients. The complication rate correlated with severe concomitant diseases and older age groups. Patients with fever and leukocytosis had a better outcome, possibly reflecting a better immunologic status. The authors conclude that aggressive preoperative preparation and judicious use of cholecystostomy as a life-saving drainage procedure can lower the mortality from acute cholecystitis in the elderly population.
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PMID:The management of acute cholecystitis in elderly patients. 192 82

From April to August 1990, 60 patients underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Patients with biliary colic were included, but those who had florid acute cholecystitis, morbid obesity or scars in the upper portion of the abdomen were excluded. Three patients had acute cholecystitis, 56 had chronic cholecystitis and 1 had hydrops of the gallbladder. Nineteen patients had had previous lower abdominal surgery. Five patients did not require analgesia, but the remainder needed parenteral analgesia on an average of 1.7 occasions and enteral analgesia on an average of 1.8 occasions. There were no intraoperative complications, and no patient had the procedure completed by standard surgery. Postoperative hospital stay averaged 2.5 days. The mean follow-up was 39 days. Few postoperative complications were noted: two patients suffered from ileus; two patients had biliary colic postoperatively (one required endoscopic sphincterotomy with stone extraction, and in the other no common-duct stones were seen on retrograde cholangiography); one patient had an intra-abdominal abscess, which was drained percutaneously; and one patient complained of upper abdominal pain that was incisional in origin. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy should be considered the procedure of choice for elective treatment of uncomplicated symptomatic gallstone disease.
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PMID:Laparoscopic cholecystectomy: a report of 60 cases. 182 56

A case of an 81 year old woman who had fever, abdominal pain and a palpable mass in epigastrium and right hypochondriac region is presented. She was diagnosed as having acute cholecystitis and hydrops of the gallbladder. The surgical operation was performed and the findings were: dilated gallbladder with necrotic aspect, free floating with torsion of the cystic duct (greater than 180 degrees) wrapped in the mentum. There was no hepatic bed of the gallbladder. After correcting the torsion, the gallbladder was extirpated, with good clinical evolution. The etiopathogenia is discussed and the literature is reviewed. Despite the rareness of the gallbladder's torsion and the disease being relatively unknown, it has to be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute abdomen in the elderly.
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PMID:[Gallbladder torsion: report of a case]. 249 Nov 91

The sonographic Murphy sign is defined as the presence of maximal tenderness elicited by direct pressure of the transducer over a sonographically localized gallbladder. The reported prevalence of this sign is more than 95% in patients with acute cholecystitis. In this series of 18 patients with pathologically proved gangrenous cholecystitis, the sonographic Murphy sign was positive in only six (33%). Clinical examination showed a positive Murphy sign in eight patients (44%), diffuse abdominal pain in nine patients (50%), and no pain in one patient (6%). Other sonographic findings included pericholecystic fluid (10), thickening of the gallbladder wall (10), and a dilated gallbladder (five). Our experience suggests that the absence of the Murphy sign increases the possibility of gangrenous cholecystitis in patients with abdominal pain and sonographic findings of cholecystitis.
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PMID:The sonographic diagnosis of acute gangrenous cholecystitis: importance of the Murphy sign. 264 62

A 52 year old patient was admitted for retrosternal pain not responding to nitroglycerin. Two years before he had suffered myocardial infarction. He had known cholecystolithiasis. Reinfarction was excluded, but the patient developed right upper quadrant abdominal pain with rebound tenderness, fever and leukocytosis. Abdominal sonography supported the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Acute illness resolved rapidly without complications under treatment with antibiotics. The patient underwent cholecystectomy during the free interval four weeks after discharge from the hospital. Intraoperative diagnosis was empyema of the gallbladder with cholecystolithiasis.
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PMID:[Acute retrosternal pain]. 264 31

A large number of drugs may be associated with impaired bile flow. Drug-associated cholestasis presents like other forms of cholestasis with pale stools, dark urine, pruritus and jaundice. Abdominal pain may be present in some instances and can be so severe as to lead to a false diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Biochemically, drug-associated cholestasis resembles other forms of cholestasis although the presence of eosinophilia may suggest drug involvement. Many types of drug-induced cholestasis run a benign course with resolution of signs and symptoms within 3 months but occasionally the jaundice can take a year or more to resolve. Progression to cirrhosis is uncommon. Some patients may develop a syndrome resembling primary biliary cirrhosis. The mechanisms of drug-associated cholestasis are uncertain but may arise from alteration of bile formation within the hepatocyte or bile excretion at the level of the canaliculus or the extrahepatic ducts. Histological examination of the liver may be helpful in classifying the types of jaundice but the diagnosis of drug-induced cholestasis is usually one of temporal association and exclusion of other causes.
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PMID:Drug-induced jaundice. 265 64

Emergency percutaneous cholecystostomy was successfully performed in 39 of 40 attempted procedures in 37 hospitalized patients with possible acute cholecystitis. All cholecystostomies were performed with ultrasound guidance and preferentially with the transhepatic route, and all but four were performed at the patient's bedside. The patients had been hospitalized an average of 27 days before the procedure. Twenty-two of the 37 patients (59%) eventually died during hospitalization because of other medical or surgical problems. Only minor complications related to percutaneous cholecystostomy placement occurred in this series: catheter dislodgment without sequelae (n = 2) and significant abdominal pain (n = 2). Technical problems included guide-wire buckling during catheter insertion (n = 1) and failed attempted cholecystostomy (n = 1). Percutaneous cholecystostomy is a safe alternative to surgical cholecystostomy in the treatment of patients suspected of having acute cholecystitis.
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PMID:Percutaneous cholecystostomy: an alternative to surgical cholecystostomy for acute cholecystitis? 267 61

Torsion or volvulus of the gallbladder is a rare cause of acute cholecystitis. Although it has been reported in all age groups, it is most commonly seen in the elderly. With our increasingly aged population, it behooves the clinician to keep this entity in mind when treating the older patient with abdominal pain. We present two cases of torsion of the gallbladder and review the clinical and pathological aspects of this disease.
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PMID:Volvulus of the gallbladder. Report of two cases and review of the literature. 268 38

Acute cholecystitis is a frequent consideration in patients presenting to the emergency department with the challenging complaint of upper abdominal pain. It is estimated that 20% of American adults have gallstones, and of these a large percentage (about one-third) will at some point develop acute cholecystitis. The epidemiology and associated risk factors of acute cholecystitis are briefly reviewed along with the pathogenesis and clinical presentation of the disease. Finally, an approach to the diagnosis in the emergency department and suggested management is discussed including a comparison of the strengths and weaknesses of ultrasonography and hepatobilary scintigraphy.
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PMID:Acute cholecystitis in the emergency department. 269 62

Numerous abdominal manifestations were noted among 600 patients undergoing treatment at Hospital Laennec for various stages of infection by the acquired immunodeficiency virus. These included violent abdominal pain in 30% of cases, the development of abdominal lymphoma, and occasionally alarming pseudo-surgical syndromes. Diagnosis is difficult, all the more so since authentic emergencies may be aggravated by the immunodeficiency state. 18 cases were collected in 3 years and included 6 cases of acute cholecystitis and 2 of appendicitis. The gangrenous and extensive nature of infection was generally noted and required appropriate antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:[Surgical emergencies and pseudo-surgical syndromes in the course of acquired immunodeficiency syndromes in adults]. 269 92


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