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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Leptospirosis, a disease acquired by exposure to contaminated water, is characterized by fever accompanied by various symptoms, including
abdominal pain
. An acute febrile illness occurred in athletes who participated in an Illinois triathlon in which the swimming event took place in a freshwater lake. Of 876 athletes, 120 sought medical care and 22 were hospitalized. Two of the athletes had their gallbladders removed because of
abdominal pain
and clinical suspicion of
acute cholecystitis
. We applied an immunohistochemical test for leptospirosis to these gallbladders and demonstrated bacterial antigens staining (granular and filamentous patterns) around blood vessels of the serosa and muscle layer. Rare intact bacteria were seen in 1 case. These results show that leptospirosis can mimic the clinical symptoms of
acute cholecystitis
. If a cholecystectomy is performed in febrile patients with suspicious environmental or animal exposure, pathologic studies for leptospirosis on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues may be of great value.
...
PMID:Leptospirosis mimicking acute cholecystitis among athletes participating in a triathlon. 1148 75
A 75-year-old man presented with right upper quadrant pain and fever. Ultrasonography showed gallstones, gallbladder enlargement, gallbladder wall thickening and pericholecystic fluid collection. Cholecystectomy confirmed the diagnosis of
acute cholecystitis
. The differential diagnosis of right upper quadrant
abdominal pain
and fever is discussed, and the role of imaging in its evaluation is emphasised.
...
PMID:Clinics in diagnostic imaging (62). Gallstones with acute cholecystitis. 1154 69
In an emergency department, many patients were admitted with
abdominal pain
. The problem is to made the right diagnosis between an acute abdomen that must be manage by a medical approach and an acute abdomen with immediate surgical treatment. We present the case of a 44 year-old man admitted in our emergency department with clinical signs of
acute cholecystitis
. After a new interrogation and the inadequacy of the diagnostic procedures a lead intoxication treated by a medical approach was diagnosed.
...
PMID:[An acute pseudo-cholecystitis]. 1172 87
Gallstone ileus accounts for 1-4% of all cases of intestinal obstruction, with its incidence rising with age of patients. There is often a long delay between onset of symptoms (usually
abdominal pain
, vomiting, and bowel distension) and proper treatment, with a simple enterolithotomy as the one of choice. We report a case of an atypical gallstone ileus presented as a complication of
acute cholecystitis
, treated with a laparoscopic guided enterolithotomy. A 67-year-old woman on the 5th p.o. day after a laparoscopic procedure for an empyematous cholecystitis (no sign of fistula or duodenal perforation and a "negative" intraoperative cholangiography) presented continuous vomiting as the only symptoms of a subileus (radiographic diagnostic images negative for intestinal obstruction or intraluminal gallstone or duodenal fistula). A laparoscopic diagnostic approach revealed a gallstone in the distal jejunum. Through a 5 cm midline incision the intestine, including the gallstone, was brought out extracorporally and the stone was removed by a simple enterolithotomy. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient had no complaint at a 1-year follow-up. We consider the laparoscopic approach, in patients with "abdominal emergencies," feasible and safe in experienced hands. It provides diagnostic accuracy as well as therapeutic capabilities, as in the case of gallstone ileus we have reported.
...
PMID:Gallstone ileus as a complication of acute cholecystitis. Laparoscopic diagnosis and treatment. 1208 38
We conducted the statistical analysis of both initial symptoms and clinical symptoms and signs of different etiologies of chronic pancreatitis by using odds ratios which was one of the techniques of evidence-based medicine. The official report published by The Research Group of Intractable Pancreatic Diseases sponsored by the Welfare Ministry of Japan in 1986 was available as the data source of the present study. Nine items of initial symptoms and 25 items of 28 clinical symptoms and signs were compared in 4 different etiologies of the disease which were alcoholic, biliary, idiopatic and nonalcoholic (both biliary and idiopatic). In initial symptoms, 1.5 items were significantly more observed in alcoholic pancreatitis than in nonalcoholic, biliary and idioatic pancreatitis, 4 of which (
abdominal pain
, back pain, poor appetite and loss of body weight) were common items as might be related closely to the alcohol intake, 2. only one item of jaundice was significantly more observed in biliary pancreatitis than in alcoholic and idiopatic pancreatitis, 3.3 items of poor appetite, diarrhea and abdominal mass were more frequently observed in idiopatic pancreatitis than in biliary pancreatitis. In clinical symptoms and signs, 1. almost all items (21 to 24) were significantly more observed in alcoholic pancreatitis than in the other etiologies of the disease, and seemed to be related directly or indirectly to alcohol intake, 2.3 or 4 items which were related closely to gallstone and
acute cholecystitis
were significantly more observed in biliary pancreatitis than the other two etiologies of the disease, and 3.4 items consisting of diarrhea, loss of body weight, and pancreatic swelling were more frequently observed in idiopathic pancreatitis than in biliary pancreatitis.
...
PMID:[Analytical studies of both initial symptoms and clinical symptoms and signs of different etiologies of chronic pancreatitis: an approach by using odds ratios]. 1217 Jul 6
We report 2 patients with
acute cholecystitis
for which percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder aspiration (PTGBA) was useful. In Case 1, the patient was a 75-year-old woman who experienced a sudden onset of back pain and upper
abdominal pain
at night. Abdominal ultrasound (US) showed enlargement of the gallbladder with thickening of the wall, a sonolucent layer, and a stone in the neck of the gallbladder, which led to a diagnosis of
acute cholecystitis
. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated thickening of the gallbladder wall and 2 areas of low-intensity signal. The pain and fever persisted, for which we performed PTGBA, aspirating about 113 ml of infected bile. Subsequently, the pain and fever subsided, and abdominal US revealed a reduction in the enlargement of the gallbladder with the persistence of thickening of the wall. On the eighth day after PTGBA, open abdominal cholecystectomy was performed. In Case 2, the patient was a 56-year-old woman who had right hypochondriac pain after supper. The pain gradually increased in severity. Abdominal US showed enlargement of the gallbladder with a thickened wall, a sonolucent layer, and a gallstone in the neck of the gallbladder, which led to a diagnosis of
acute cholecystitis
. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) showed enlargement of the gallbladder with no abnormalities in the common bile duct. After admission to hospital, the pain and fever persisted, for which we performed PTGBA, aspirating about 50 ml of infected bile. Subsequently, the pain and fever vanished. Abdominal US revealed a reduction in the enlargement of the gallbladder with the persistence of thickening of the wall. On the seventh day after PTGBA, laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed. PTGBA seems useful for early alleviation of the symptoms of
acute cholecystitis
because of low invasiveness and ease of performance.
...
PMID:Two cases of acute cholecystitis in which percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder aspiration (PTGBA) was useful. 1247 32
Pseudoaneurysm of the cystic artery is a rare cause of hemobilia, with only 11 cases having been reported in the English literature. We report this unusual condition in a 62-year-old Japanese man whose chief complaint was repeated upper
abdominal pain
. A liver function test showed obstructive jaundice, and endoscopy revealed a small amount of blood coming from the papilla of Vater. We diagnosed him as having hemobilia, and immediate angiography was performed. The results demonstrated a pseudoaneurysm arising in the cystic artery. Selective embolization of the cystic artery then followed. Ten days later the patient underwent elective cholecystectomy and had a good postoperative course. Microscopically, the resected specimen revealed caliculous cholecystitis and an organized pseudoaneurysm perforating the lumen of the gallbladder. We supposed that this pseudoaneurysm was associated with the inflammatory reaction seen with the
acute cholecystitis
. This case emphasizes the need for a high level of awareness of hemobilia whenever bleeding is associated with signs of biliary disorders. Immediate angiography and embolization of the pseudoaneurysm followed by radical surgery may be the preferred strategy. We believe this is the first reported case of successful "two-step" treatment of such a pseudoaneurysm.
...
PMID:Pseudoaneurysm of the cystic artery with hemobilia treated by arterial embolization and elective cholecystectomy. 1265 12
Q fever is a worldwide-occurring zoonosis caused by Coxiella burnetii. There are various clinical manifestations of acute Q fever, of which
acute cholecystitis
is a very rare clinical presentation. This study reports seven cases of
acute cholecystitis
associated with Coxiella burnetii and reviews two other cases from the literature. All patients were admitted to hospital for fever and
abdominal pain
in the right upper quadrant. Abdominal echography showed a distended gallbladder with biliary sludge without concrements in eight cases and with a single stone in one case. Diagnosis was made by specific serological investigation (microimmunofluorescence assay) for Coxiella burnetii. All nine patients were cured, six after laparoscopic cholecystectomy and three with antibiotics only. Histological examination of the gallbladders showed inflammation in five cases, although Coxiella burnetii was not detected by immunohistochemistry. The results show that laboratory investigations in patients admitted to hospital for symptoms consistent with acute acalculous cholecystitis should include a systematic search for Coxiella burnetii.
...
PMID:Acute acalculous cholecystitis associated with Q fever: report of seven cases and review of the literature. 1268 14
Untreated rupture of an aneurysm of the abdominal aorta is fatal in almost 100% of the patients. In the majority of cases the assessment of a correct, early diagnosis is simple (hypotension, backache,
abdominal pain
, pulsating resistance in the abdomen) and makes a prompt surgical or endovascular operation possible. In some instances however rupture of aneurysms of the abdominal aorta simulates other clinical conditions (
acute cholecystitis
, acute diverculitis of the sigmoid) which may delay the correct diagnosis and reduce the patient's chance of survival. The author describes, based on historical documents, the treacherous course of the disease in the scientific genius Albert Einstein where rupture of an aneurysm simulated
acute cholecystitis
, and in the world literature this symptomatology was subsequently described as Einstein's sign.
...
PMID:[The Einstein sign]. 1271 3
Acute hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection is frequent in developing countries. Although some gallbladder abnormalities are defined during the course, an
acute cholecystitis
is extremely rare. We here report 2 additional cases of cholecystitis due to acute HAV infection and review the previously reported 2 cases. One of our patients was admitted with jaundice and a suspicious portal mass with a presumed diagnosis of cholagiocarcinoma. The other presented with jaundice,
abdominal pain
, and constitutional symptoms. Both patients were planned to be operated on. During the follow-up, absence of fever, leukocytosis, acute-phase protein response, and calculus in biliary system were against the diagnosis of a bacterial cholecystitis. Moreover the course of cholecystitis was closely parallel to that of the HAV infection. Both patients were managed conservatively. It was concluded that rare, acute viral cholecystitis can develop during the course of acute HAV infection.
...
PMID:Acute viral cholecystitis due to hepatitis A virus infection. 1281 Dec 16
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