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

Two patients with hemobilia are presented. The first patient, with alcoholic liver disease, had a percutaneous liver biopsy. Subsequently he developed jaundice, with an enlarged tender gallbladder, biliary colic, and gastrointestinal bleeding. Hemobilia was demonstrated by superselective hepatic angiography and bleeding was stopped by intraarterial infusion of epinephrine and propranolol. The second patient, with primary biliary cirrhosis at an advanced stage, had a percutaneous liver biopsy followed by gastrointestinal bleeding, severe abdominal pain, and finally death. In both cases hemobilia was suggested by gastroduodenoscopy.
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PMID:Traumatic hemobilia: a complication of percutaneous liver biopsy. 30 Mar 43

A radiological diagnosis of ascariasis of the gallbladder was made in two middle-aged women with high abdominal pain having biliary colic characteristics. In one case round worm was demonstrated by means of the intravenous cholangiography, but in the other the procedure was negative only the common bile duct being contrasted. Oral cholangiography made some days later permitted the visualization of the parasite in the gallbladder. The patients were treated by cholecistectomy and choledocostomy and the diagnosis was confirmed. The post-operative course was uneventful. There was Ascaris lumbricoides ova in the feces and the histological examination of the removed gallbladder showed large eosinophilic infiltration in both cases. The patients received levamisole some days after surgery.
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PMID:Ascariasis of the gall bladder. Report of two cases. 82 74

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is increasingly being used in adults with gallbladder disease. Despite the exponential increase in the number of laparoscopic cholecystectomies performed in adults, there are very few reports of its use in children. It is thought that gallstone disease is rare in childhood. Since the introduction of ultrasonography, it is used almost routinely for evaluating children with abdominal pain, and cholelithiasis is being increasingly recognized in children. Since the beginning of 1991 we evaluated 7 children for biliary colic, and on sonography gallstones were demonstrated in all of them. 1 boy also had thalassemia and another hyperlipidemia; the other 5 developed symptoms of biliary colic without any history of hematological or other disease. 5 underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy without complication. In the other 2 laparotomy was performed. In 1 suspected damage to the common bile duct during laparoscopy required direct visualization, but no damage was found. In the other, no gallbladder was identified on laparoscopy; laparotomy confirmed the diagnosis of congenital agenesis of the gallbladder with several technical modifications. We found laparoscopic cholecystectomy to be both safe and effective in children. Its advantages include shorter hospitalization, decreased postoperative discomfort and a much shorter interval between operation and return to normal activity.
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PMID:[Laparoscopic cholecystectomy in children]. 138 28

A 51-year-old woman with known dextrocardia presented with left-sided abdominal pain and symptoms consistent with biliary colic and cholelithiasis. Abdominal ultrasound confirmed the diagnosis of gallstones, as well as situs inversus with the liver and gallbladder on the left side and the spleen on the right. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed without incident. The procedure was uncomplicated except for being the mirror image of that done with the gallbladder in the normal location. Cholelithiasis occurring with situs inversus is rare and may present a diagnostic problem. The extrahepatic anatomy of the biliary and venous system is the mirror image of the right sided liver. Historic and genetic aspects of situs inversus, as well as current theories regarding its etiology are presented. Situs inversus totalis does not appear to be a contraindication to laparoscopic treatment of cholelithiasis.
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PMID:Laparoscopic cholecystectomy in situs inversus totalis. 138 70

Asymptomatic biliary lithiasis can be defined as biliary lithiasis having determined no complication and no episode of biliary pain. Biliary pain is a consequence of acute increase of pressure inside the biliary tract. The increased pressure is induced by a stone transiently obstructing the cystic duct or the Oddi sphincter. In most patients, the site of the pain is epigastric. The level of the pain is high. The duration of the episode of biliary pain is usually less than 5 hours. Abdominal pain having other characteristics, dyspepsia, and headache are not related to biliary lithiasis.
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PMID:[Definition of asymptomatic biliary lithiasis]. 141 Nov 66

The paper reports on 108 cases of hepatic hydatidosis, admitted to the clinic in the last 12 years, who wer subjected systematically to hepatic imagery, immunologic investigation at hydatic antigen, determination of eosinophil and hepatic biochemical exploration. All the cases were checked operatively. The females were predominant, 66.11%, the average age was of 42.88 +/- 11.94 years. The greatest part of the cases ranged within the 5th-7th age decades. The investigation shows that there exists, in Romania, an endemic region infested with Echinococcus tenia in the Danube zone. The most frequent contamination sources were the cats and dogs; only in 11.11% of the cases the patients were breeding animals. The most cases were discovered late and had an important hepatomegaly. The patients sought help from the physician an ailment in the right hypochondria in 52.78% of the cases, followed by fever (16.68%), biliary colic (12.96%), abdominal pain; (9.26%) and incidentally in 12.04% of the cases. The medium diameter of the hydatic cyst at its discovery was of 10.65% +/- 5.84/14.06 +/- 7.12 cm; only in 21.3% of the cases the diameter of the cyst was lower than 6 cm. The causes of the late diagnosis were: sporadic hepatic imagistic exploration; sensibility of scintigraphy was of 87.5% whereas that of echography was of 98% and that of the CT-scanning od 100%; other cause was due to the lack of immunologic tests at hydatic antigen; sensibility of hemagglutination inhibition is of 65% and that of contra-immunoelectrophoresis of 86%. Owing to the late discovery of the disease, a lethal evolution was recorded by rupture of the cyst and peritoneal inundation in a young patient of 29 years old. Hepatic echinococcosis was unilocular in 74.07% of the case, with predominance in the right lobe (67.5%). The complications rate was of 14.83%, with predominance of the suppuration (10.19%). The paper confirms the endemic state of the hydatic disease, in the Danubian zone of Romania and pleads for the necessity of improving the diagnosis by systematic application of the echographic examination and of better immunologic tests in the ambulatory.
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PMID:[108 cases of hepatic hydatid cyst]. 167 Jan 30

An EDAP LT-01 lithotripter was used to treat 245 patients with functioning gallbladders containing one to three radiolucent stones of less than 20 mm in diameter. Ursodeoxycholic acid was administrated as adjuvant litholytic therapy. The gallbladder stones disintegrated in 98.8% of patients and disappeared completely in 21.2% within 1 month after lithotripsy, in 26.5% within 2 months, in 33.9, 40, 46.5, 48.6 and 53.9% within 3, 4, 6, 9, and 12 months, respectively. Adverse effects after lithotripsy were dull abdominal pain (49.4%), biliary colic (13.1%), jaundice (1.2%), and pancreatitis (0.4%). Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy combined with litholytic therapy is a non-invasive, painless, safe, and effective treatment in selected patients. Patients with solitary radiolucent stone less than 20 mm in diameter are considered candidates for extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL). The key to success of ESWL lies in the strict selection of patients, careful monitoring throughout the lithotriptic procedure, and enough litholytic therapy. The disadvantages of this method include strict selection of patients and high costs, poor curative effect, and recurrence of stones (11.4% of patients).
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PMID:Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. Experience in treating 245 patients with gallbladder stones. 211 55

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

Extracorporeal lithotripsy has a high incidence of postprocedure biliary colic and slow disappearance of gallstones. This situation has led to the development of a new technique which has been successful in four patients and consists of percutaneous cholecystostomy, direct stone visualization, and fragmentation of gallstones with a percutaneous lithotripter. All patients had a functioning gallbladder, stone diameter less than 30 mm, and abdominal pain secondary to cholelithiasis. The procedure was performed in a two day hospitalization. Initially, under general anesthesia, the gallbladder was intubated with a 21 gauge needle and guidewire and the tract dilated to #30 French. A nephroscope was advanced into the gallbladder through a rigid sheath. All gallstones were visualized, fragmented with a percutaneous lithotripter, and extracted. After a postoperative cholecystocholangiogram, an self-retaining catheter was placed in the gallbladder for an average of 2.5 days. Three of the four patients were discharged from the hospital in two days without any complications. A fourth patient had a small bile leak treated with antibiotics. After an average of 13 months follow-up, all patients had a normal ultrasound or oral cholecystogram and no biliary tract symptoms. This technique is safe and efficient in removing gallstones and has no recurrence of gallstones in the 13 month follow-up period.
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PMID:Percutaneous cholecystostomy and lithotripsy of gallstones. 219 14

We studied the prevalence of gallstones in patients with upper abdominal pain, heaviness, or discomfort by ultrasound examination of the gallbladder. The actual ultrasound examination was performed by a clinical gastroenterologist blinded to the symptoms. Of 1,680 consecutive dyspeptic patients, 500 (29.8%) had gallstones. The gallbladder was contracted in 450 (91.2%), normal-size in 36 (7.2%), and distended in 8 (1.6%). Biliary colic was more frequently the presenting complaint in patients with a contracted gallbladder than in those with normal size gallbladder (p less than 0.001). Dyspepsia was more frequent in the presence of a normal size gallbladder than a contracted one (p less than 0.001). We conclude that ultrasonography of the gallbladder by the clinician has a high diagnostic yield, and the symptom complex has an excellent correlation with the sonographic appearance.
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PMID:Gallstone disease in north India: clinical and ultrasound profile in a referral hospital. 222 98


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