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

Right-sided colonic diverticulitis is an uncommon disorder that most frequently mimics appendicitis. During pregnancy, displacement of the diseased cecum and ascending colon into the right upper quadrant may result in symptomatology that mimics cholecystitis. A 37-year-old white woman with a history of previous benign incidental appendectomy presented at 20 weeks' gestation with right upper abdominal pain and nausea for 2 days. Significant findings included local rebound tenderness and palpable fullness over the gallbladder, leukocytosis, and low-grade fever, but otherwise unremarkable routine serum laboratory test results and sonographic evidence of biliary tract disease. Cholescintigraphy was rejected by the patient. Persistence of symptoms for 3 hospital days despite administration of broad-spectrum parenteral antibiotics prompted surgical intervention. Laparoscopy demonstrated a normal-appearing gall-bladder and an acutely infected, solitary diverticulum of the midascending colon with adhesions to the omentum and to the parietal peritoneum near the gallbladder. Adhesiolysis, omental biopsy, and peritoneal drainage were performed endoscopically. The patient recovered uneventfully and delivered vaginally at term without fetal or maternal complications. Right-sided colonic diverticulitis may present during pregnancy and may mimic symptoms of acute cholecystitis. Laparoscopic treatment of a solitary, acutely infected colonic diverticulum is feasible in this setting.
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PMID:Right-sided colonic diverticulitis mimicking acute cholecystitis in pregnancy: case report and laparoscopic treatment. 995 Jan 33

An 81-year-old woman with unintentional salicylate intoxication presented with features of sepsis, abdominal pain, and tenderness. Laparotomy was performed to rule out acute cholecystitis. Anesthesia was complicated by severe hypercarbia despite hyperventilation, and progressive cardiovascular and neurologic deterioration postoperatively. The adverse neurologic, respiratory, and hepatic effects of abdominal surgery and general anesthesia probably potentiated salicylate toxicity and increased patient morbidity. Anesthesiologists should be aware of the protean manifestations of salicylate poisoning and consider it as a cause of "medical abdomen."
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PMID:Anesthesia in a patient with undiagnosed salicylate poisoning presenting as intraabdominal sepsis. 1043 24

Gastrointestinal complications such as peptic ulcer disease, pancreatitis, acute cholecystitis, bowel ischaemia, and diverticulitis are rare after cardiac surgery (< 1%), but are associated with high morbidity and mortality (about 30%). Hypoperfusion during cardiopulmonary bypass seems a possible aetiological factor. As many patients may be mechanically ventilated and sedated, the usual symptoms and signs of an abdominal complication may be masked. It is necessary to keep this possibility in mind in patients with abdominal pain or tenderness, and the usual diagnostic measures should be undertaken if time permits. Initial treatment is usually conservative, but when it fails, prompt intervention is obligatory. Unfortunately surgeons are often reluctant to submit patients to major abdominal operations immediately after cardiac surgery. However, effective and timely intervention may be life-saving in patients who are poorly able to compensate for the major haemodynamic disturbances of the untreated serious bleeding or sepsis. Although the cardiac condition must be taken into consideration, most patients' cardiac function will have improved since their open-heart surgery and they should be able to withstand general anaesthesia and most operations.
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PMID:Intra-abdominal complications after cardiac surgery. 1053 54

We report here a case of torsion of the gallbladder in a 73-year-old woman. The patient was admitted to our hospital with right hypochondralgia. Ultrasonography and computed tomography demonstrated a distended gallbladder, with a multilayered wall, which contained no stones. Since the symptoms did not respond to antibiotics, laparotomy was performed. The gallbladder was found to be twisted around its pedicle and to be gangrenous. Cholecystectomy was performed, and the patient had an uneventful postoperative course. We also reviewed 245 cases reported in the Japanese literature. The clinical features of gallbladder torsion, which include low frequency of fever and jaundice, poor response to antibiotic therapy, and acute onset of abdominal pain, may be helpful in the differential diagnosis from acute cholecystitis. Moreover, a highly suggestive sign of gallbladder torsion observed by ultrasonography or computed tomography is a markedly enlarged "floating" gallbladder with a continuous hypoechoic line indicating edematous change in the wall.
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PMID:Gallbladder torsion: case report and review of 245 cases reported in the Japanese literature. 1066 94

Acute cholecystitis in a patient with HIV infection represents a difficult diagnostic problem. With improved antiretroviral therapy, many of the biliary problems we have seen in these patients are identical to those in nonimmunosuppressed patients (ie, they are largely caused by gallstones). The indication for cholecystectomy is usually right upper quadrant abdominal pain that has been persistent for weeks to months. Although cholecystectomy will result in pain relief in many patients, the presence of coexisting HIV cholangiopathy in about half these patients increases the likelihood of ongoing symptoms. Patients should be counseled that postoperative endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) may be necessary and that some of the variants of HIV cholangiopathy do not respond to endoscopic therapy. The high perioperative mortality in these patients is not related to biliary tract disease but is rather a manifestation of severe underlying disease associated with advanced HIV infection. HIV cholangiopathy represents a complication of severe immunosuppression. Patients are generally in poor condition and often have coexisting infections or malignancies. The decision regarding how aggressively to approach a patient with suspected HIV cholangiopathy, a nonfatal condition, is best made with consideration of the degree of pain being reported. All patients should undergo an abdominal ultrasound, with ERCP being offered to those with severe or debilitating pain and who are found to have dilated bile ducts suggesting papillary stenosis. Should this finding be confirmed at cholangiography, sphincterotomy is effective palliation for abdominal pain in most cases. ERCP is considerably less useful in patients who have elevated liver enzyme levels without symptoms; there is only a small likelihood of identifying an infection not previously recognized or better diagnosed noninvasively. These patients do not generally benefit from sphincterotomy. The regular use of ERCP in patients with HIV for the evaluation of elevated liver enzyme levels is to be discouraged, because the very limited potential benefit of the procedure does not outweigh the risks.
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PMID:Biliary Problems in People with HIV Disease. 1109 86

Over a 6-year period, 42 patients with different underlying diseases developed Aeromonas bacteremia in our hospital. The male to female ratio was 2:1. The vast majority of these patients had underlying diseases, including various types of neoplasm (n = 14), liver cirrhosis (n = 11), biliary tract disorder (n = 10) and other illnesses (n = 7). Community-acquired bacteremia was predominant (33 cases, 79%). Aeromonas hydrophila was the most common species isolated (88%). Monomicrobial bacteremia was more common than polymicrobial bacteremia (64% vs 36%). Monomicrobial bacteremia was associated with neoplasm or liver cirrhosis in 80% of patients. Polymicrobial bacteremia was more common in patients with biliary tract disorder than in patients from other groups (60% vs 40%). Escherichia coli (60%) was the predominant concomitant organism isolated. The major clinical manifestations were fever (74%), jaundice (57%), and abdominal pain (45%). Recognized infection sites included biliary tract, soft tissue involvement, peritoneal involvement, while 50% of patients had no recognized infection site. Eight patients (80%) received cholecystectomy due to gall stone with acute cholecystitis. However, none of the cirrhotic patients with necrotizing fasciitis received surgical treatment. The mortality attributed to Aeromonas bacteremia was 70%. Patients with liver cirrhosis or malignancy had a higher acute mortality (death within 7 days after admission) than the other patients (89% vs 11%). We conclude that Aeromonas bacteremia can cause a rapidly fatal outcome and should be considered an important pathogen for septicemia in patients with liver cirrhosis or neoplasm.
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PMID:Outcomes of Aeromonas bacteremia in patients with different types of underlying disease. 1126 69

Patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) have an increased prevalence of cholelithiasis. The goal of this study was to clarify the presentation and management of symptomatic gallstone disease in patients with SCI. We performed a retrospective study of presentation of gallstone complications in patients with SCI who underwent cholecystectomy for complications of gallstone disease. The West Roxbury Veterans Administration Medical Center SCI registry (605 patients) was searched for patients who had undergone cholecystectomy more than 1 year after SCI (35 patients). Gallbladder disease profiles for the 35 patients undergoing cholecystectomy for complications of gallstone disease were prepared, including demographics, clinical presentation, diagnostic studies, operative and pathologic findings, and postoperative complications. All patients were white. Thirty-four were male and the mean age was 50 years (range 35 to 65 years). The majority of patients (66%) complained of right upper quadrant abdominal pain, even those patients with SCI at high (i.e., cervical) levels. Of the 35 patients in our study group, 22 (63%) had biliary colic and chronic cholecystitis, nine (26%) had acute cholecystitis (gangrenous cholecystitis in two), two (6%) had choledocholithiasis symptoms or cholangitis, and two (6%) had gallstone pancreatitis. Major perioperative morbidity occurred in two (6%) of the 35 patients (pulmonary embolus; intraoperative hemorrhage), and there were no deaths. In the great majority of patients with SCI, cholelithiasis presents with chronic pain and not with life-threatening complications. Our findings suggest that presentation is no more acute in patients with SCI than in the general population. Characteristic symptoms and signs are not necessarily obscured by SCI injury, regardless of the level.
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PMID:Symptomatic gallstones in patients with spinal cord injury. 1130 1

We report three cases of Fitrz-Hugh Curtis syndrome (FHCs) that were diagnosed laparoscopically and showed microbiological or serological evidence of chlamydial infection. The case histories underscore the part played by abdominal right quadrant symptoms. In all three cases, right quadrant pain and tenderness constituted the presenting features. The patients were thought to have acute cholecystitis or acute appendicitis, but investigations proved negative. Laparoscopy was the key to the diagnosis, revealing the violin-string-like perihepatic adhesions typical of this syndrome. Lysis of the adhesions resolved the patients' symptoms of persistent severe abdominal pain. In the first case, the pain lessened dramatically only after the third operation, when the perihepatic adhesions were lysed. In the two other cases, the lysis was performed laparoscopically by fulguration and cutting. We consider this procedure to be an excellent therapeutic modality for the pain associated with FHCs.
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PMID:The value of laparoscopy in the diagnosis and therapy of violin-string like perihepatic nonpostoperative adhesions. 1134 40

A 39-year-old man hospitalized with upper abdominal pain had been found to have a 3mm polyp in the body of the gallbladder 3 years previously. Laboratory tests on admission showed mild liver dysfunction. Ultrasonography depicted a dilated gallbladder with increased wall thickness; the polyp could no longer be seen. Computed tomography with drip infusion cholangiography again showed a dilated gallbladder, and also stenosis of the distal cystic duct. The resected specimen obtained by laparoscopic cholecystectomy showed disappearance of the polyp from the body of the gallbladder. A cholesterol stone was incarcerated in the cystic duct, representing an impacted detached cholesterol polyp causing acute cholecystitis. Spontaneous detachment of a cholesterol polyp from the gallbladder mucosa, then, can result in acute cholecystitis.
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PMID:Acute cholecystitis caused by a cholesterol polyp. 1140 73

Gallbladder paraganglioma is a very rare tumor and so far only a few cases have been reported. Most of these were asymptomatic and were found incidentally during operation. Recently, we experienced a gallbladder paraganglioma that gave rise to hemorrhage, which in turn caused acute cholecystitis. Our case involved a 45 year-old female patient complaining of an intermittent right upper abdominal pain. After a preoperative evaluation, cholecystectomy and lymphadenectomy were performed under the impression of gallbladder cancer with acute cholecystitis. Postoperative pathologic examination revealed a hemorrhagic gallbladder paraganglioma accompanied by acute cholecystitis. Immunohistochemical staining of the chief cells for neuron specific enolase, chromogranin and synaptophysin were positive. Sustentacular cells also stained positively for S100 protein.
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PMID:A case of hemorrhagic gallbladder paraganglioma causing acute cholecystitis. 1145 4


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