Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

102 patients using Trinordiol, a triphasic oral contraceptive (OC) containing ethinyl estradiol and d-norgestrel, were followed for 932 cycles in a study of secondary effects. Follow-up visits were scheduled after 1,3, and 6 months and every 6 months thereafter. 26 patients discontinued use of the pills during the study after using them for a total of 159 cycles. 5 discontinued because of abdominal pain, 1 for breast tenderness, and 1 because of headaches or migraines. 7 discontinued because of metrorrhagia, 4 for weight gain, 3 for amenorrhea, 2 for nausea and vomiting, and 1 each for nervousness, water retention, acne, desire for pregnancy, leaving the country, hypertension, and unknown motivation. the average age of patients was 23.6 years, with a range from 14-48. 76% were aged 15-29 years. 52.9% were nulliparas. 58.8% were Belgian, 21.6% were from Mediterranean Europe, 10.8% were Moroccan, and 7.9% were from black Africa. Only 1 patient, a 37 year old, developed hypertension. 15 patients gained more than 2 kg and 17 lost more than 2 kg. 15.8% complained of spotting during the 1st cycle compared to 3.1% during the 6th cycle, 5.2% during cycle 7-12, and 9.1% during cycle 13-30. Among 35 patients who did not discontinue treatment, 7 complained of amenorrhea and 1 of scanty menstrual bleeding, 14 of pain including 7 cases of pelvic pain, 2 of dysmenorrhea, 3 of breast tenderness, and 2 of headaches, 15 of leukorrhea, 3 of nausea, 2 of dizziness, and 1 each of fatigue, acne, galactorrhea, and cutaneous pruritus. 1 case of myoma at the level of the uterine cornu was identified after 24 cycles of treatment. In all, 61 patients had some complaint, while 41 were totally satisfied. No patient became pregnant during the study.
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PMID:[Clinical study of the secondary effects associated with taking a triphasic anti-ovulatory contraceptive]. 670 4

Cerebral origin of relapsing paroxysmal abdominal pains is discussed in the light of six case histories, other personal observations and the literature. The pains are assumed to be due to locally limited epileptic discharges in areas of the cortex where the digestive tract is represented. When the neuronal discharges reach other brain formations, multisymptomatic, partial or generalized epileptic seizures occur. In such cases, therefore, the abdominal symptomatology is either a first stage or a rudiment of a more complex course of attack, and should not be considered as the expression of a particular form of epilepsy that might be termed abdominal epilepsy. Difficulties regarding differential diagnosis ensue in the case of migraine with abdominal symptomatology. The latter should be taken into account when relapsing attacks of abdominal pain, which cannot be explained gastroenterologically, persist for hours and alternate with headache. In case of doubt, a family history of migraine confirms the diagnosis.
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PMID:[Recurring paroxysmal abdominal pains of cerebral origin]. 679 44

Recurrent vomiting in adults is characterized by episodes of forceful vomiting which last several hours and recur at inconstant intervals; patients are free from symptoms between episodes. The series comprised 17 male and 14 female patients whose ages ranged from 14 to 69 years. In 10 patients, the vomiting attacks were accompanied by diarrhoea, and in 10 by abdominal pain. Eight patients suffered from bilious vomiting in childhood, and 11 patients had migraine. Five patients gave a family history of recurrent vomiting. Management necessitated a sympathetic approach and balanced investigation. Prochlorperazine administered by injection was helpful in the alleviation of an acute attack, but the possible value of more specific antimigraine therapy remains to be established. Evidence supports a link with migraine, which has an association with other gastrointestinal disorders such as irritable bowel and oesophageal reflux. In cases in which pain is prominent, cholelithiasis should be carefully excluded, but cholecystectomy did not always cure vomiting attacks.
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PMID:Recurrent vomiting in adults. A syndrome? 683 34

A retrospective method was used to estimate the incidence of recurring motion-sickness, cyclic vomiting and abdominal pain considered as different manifestations of a so-called periodic syndrome in 100 migraine sufferers, 100 epileptics and 100 control subjects in the pediatric age group. Such recurrent symptoms are significantly more frequent in those suffering from migraine than in the other two groups. Examination of subgroups of patients affected by particular forms of migraine (classical and common) and of epilepsy (generalized seizures, simple partial seizures, complex partial seizures) contributed little new to our understanding of the nature of periodic syndrome. It is concluded that the above symptoms of periodic syndrome should generally be considered as manifestations of a migrainous rather than of an epileptic disorder.
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PMID:Cyclic vomiting and recurrent abdominal pains as migraine or epileptic equivalents. 687 85

The long term development of periodic syndromes among children is little known. Our research has revealed that about one third of periodic headaches, two thirds of cyclic vomiting and half the cases of recurring abdominal pain disappear either before puberty or during adolescence. Other Authors have shown that this also happens in most cases of early-onset vertigo. The remaining headache cases develop into migraines in adults. When there is persistent cyclic vomiting, the collateral neurologic phenomena (headaches, vertigo, pallor, hypotonia, drowsiness) become more intense. This also happens in some cases of abdominal pain and paroxysmal vertigo which start in late childhood. Other sufferers from acute abdominal pain develop ulcers, gastroduodenitis and colitis as adults. Altogether, some infantile periodic syndromes (in particular the multi-symptomatic ones) have a common outcome, i.e. develop into more or less typical migraine syndromes. In these cases one can presume a common pathogenetic mechanism. In those cases where the outcome is favorable the pathogenesis may be different. These cases may often be spotted in early childhood on account of the monosymptomatic nature of the complaint or the absence of collateral neurologic symptoms as well as of the infrequency of critical episodes.
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PMID:[Childhood periodic syndromes and their long-term development]. 692 13

In 1955 a population study in Uppsala comprising about 9,000 school children showed that migraine increased from 1.4% at the age of seven to 5.3% at fifteen. With increasing age there was an increasing predominance of girls. A matched comparison between 73 children with more pronounced migraine and 73 control children showed a greater tendency in the migraine group to abdominal pain, motion sickness, sleep disturbance and orthostatic symptoms. In a longitudinal study lasting 23 years the 73 migraine children were followed-up until all were over 30 years of age. During puberty and as young adults 62% were free from migraine for at least two years. Of these, 22% again suffered migraine regularly. Thus, 60% had migraine attacks at 30. Girls seem to have a greater relapse rate than boys. Most of the girls with classical migraine were headache free during pregnancy. Every third family with one parent belonging to the migraine group and with children over four years of age had one child with migraine symptoms. Migraine seems to be more frequently inherited via the mother, and to girls.
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PMID:Migraine in childhood and its prognosis. 734 76

Following the criteria of the IHS, we studied 117 children (63 female and 54 male, mean age 9.35 +/- 1.65 years), selecting those classified as migraine (77) or tension-type headaches (30), total 107. We analysed the frequency of clinical manifestations with each type of headache (type and localization of pain, severity of the headache--intensity, duration and degree of disability--and associated symptoms) and their contribution to the differential diagnosis of each entity (evaluated as the presence--sensitivity--or absence--specificity--of each clinical manifestation in each group). Our study shows that throbbing headache (49%) and a unilateral location (31%) as well as nausea and vomiting (33.6%), although constituting diagnostic criteria of migraine, according to the IHS, have acceptable sensibility (91-95%), but only slight specificity (34-40%) for infantile migraine. On the other hand, we found that a greater intensity of headache (22%), and the presence of abdominal pain (15%) as associated symptom, although not considered diagnostic criteria, are also parameters of high sensitivity (100-92%) respectively, and also of greater specificity (30-70%) than the anterior criteria. We conclude that the criteria of IHS for the diagnosis of headache in infancy may be valid although some considerations are necessary. The new IHS criteria for the headache diagnosis in adults [1] may be useful in pediatric age, but the experience on this use is spare, consequently the increment on the use of this classification and the future changes, could produce a best operativity in the diagnosis of headache in childrens.
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PMID:[Evaluation of usefulness of the IHS criteria in the diagnosis of functional headaches in pediatric age]. 749 35

Headache either as an isolated syndrome or as part of a symptomatic grouping is a frequent reason for medical consultation or hospitalization during childhood and adolescence. We review 94 clinical histories of patients between three and thirteen years of age. Headache was the reason for being hospitalized in all cases. Our aim was to assess its incidence rate, epidemiology, clinical characteristics and etiology in addition to evaluating as to whether complementary examinations carried out during hospitalization were worthwhile. Among the most significant results were the following: age (73 patients were over seven years old, 77.6%), time elapsed for symptomatology to evolve (exactly or less than one week in 45% of cases); family history of migraine in 55 cases (58.5%). The most frequent accompanying symptoms were vomiting (38.2%), nausea (22.3%) and abdominal pain (19.1%). Physical exam was normal in 63 cases (67%) while sixteen patients (17%) had neurological focal signs and/or signs of endocranial hypertension (ECHT). Electroencephalography was performed on 94.6% of the patients and proved pathological in 22 cases (25%). Brain computerized tomography (CT) scan was carried out on 92.5% of the patients with space occupying lesions in 3.2% of the cases. The most frequent final diagnosis (52% of patients) was one of migraine. We did not find any patients with intracranial expansionary processes not showing signs of ECHT and/or neurological focalization, for which reason we doubt the profitability of the almost routine practice of carrying out brain CT scan on patients when severe headache is the sole symptom and where there are no specific findings during physical examination.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A retrospective study of infant headache]. 749 36

The prevalence and clinical features of migraine headache and abdominal migraine were studied in the well defined population of Aberdeen schoolchildren. Ten per cent of all children (2165) aged 5-15 years were given a questionnaire inquiring, among other symptoms, about the history of headache and abdominal pain over the past year. A total of 1754 children (81%) responded. Children with at least two episodes of severe headache and/or sever abdominal pain, attributed by the parents either to unknown causes or to migraine, were invited to attend for clinical interview and examination. After interview, 159 children fulfilled the International Headache Society's criteria for the diagnosis of migraine and 58 children had abdominal migraine giving estimated prevalence rates of 10.6% and 4.1% respectively. Children with abdominal migraine had demographic and social characteristics similar to those of children with migraine. They also had similar patterns of associated recurrent painful conditions, trigger and relieving factors, and associated symptoms during attacks. The similarities between the two conditions are so close as to suggest that they have a common pathogenesis.
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PMID:Prevalence and clinical features of abdominal migraine compared with those of migraine headache. 761 7

We studied the prevalence, causes and clinical features of paroxysmal vertigo (PV) in the well-defined childhood population of the City of Aberdeen. We applied a screening questionnaire to 2165 children (10% random sample of all children 5-15 years of age) attending schools in Aberdeen. Children with a history of at least three episodes of vertigo over the past year due to unknown causes were invited for clinical interview and examination. Children with PV were compared with a group of children with migraine, and with a group of asymptomatic children matched for age and sex. Forty-five children fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for PV (prevalence rate 2.6%, 95% CI 1.9-3.4). They were noted to have clinical features in common with children with migraine, including trigger and relieving factors, associated gastrointestinal and sensory symptoms, vasomotor changes, and a similar pattern of associated recurrent disorders (such as headache, abdominal pain and cyclical vomiting), atopic diseases and travel sickness. Also, they had a twofold increase in the prevalence of migraine (24%) compared with the general childhood population (10.6%). The overlap in the clinical features of PV and migraine suggests that the two conditions are related and that it is reasonable to continue to regard PV as a migraine equivalent.
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PMID:Paroxysmal vertigo as a migraine equivalent in children: a population-based study. 775 93


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