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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case report of a 36-year-old unmarried woman who was admitted to the hospital with right-sided colicky
abdominal pain
accompanied by nausea and vomiting is presented. The woman had undergone a vaginal operation for termination of pregnancy 3 months previously during which the uterine fundus had been accidentally perforated and then repaired. On the present occasion, a straight radiograph of the abdomen showed a small calcified fetus (
lithopedion
) in the pelvis to the right of the midline. The obstruction was removed during laparotomy. Apparently, at the time of accidental uterine perforation the fetus escaped into the peritoneal cavity where it underwent calcification. Other cases of
lithopedion
reported in the literature have generally been related to extrauterine rather than intrauterine pregnancies as in this case.
...
PMID:Acute intestinal obstruction caused by lithopaedion. 557 31
Lithopedion
is a rare obstetrical outcome of an undiagnosed and untreated advanced abdominal pregnancy, mostly found incidentally. We present a case of
lithopedion
. In a 76 year-old female suffering from cervical neoplasm, total abdominal hysterectomy was performed for the lesion and the
lithopedion
was found incidentally. The patient's history was unremarkable, and laboratory tests were normal. The patient recalled having experienced a severe
abdominal pain
about 50 years before. Her physician had felt "a benign tumor" in her pelvis at that time, indicating that the stone child had retained in the maternal peritoneal cavity for 50 years.
...
PMID:Lithopedion. 1153 6
Abdominal pregnancy is a rare form of ectopic pregnancy which occurs due to ruptured uterine or tubal pregnancy into the abdomen. Fetal loss is a common complication of these pregnancies and patient presents with acute abdominal pain which is a surgical emergency. Another rare but established complication of this ectopic pregnancy is fetal demise with the dead fetus being retained in the abdomen. It gets macerated and mummified over a period of time and is mostly detected incidentally during imaging. Radiological imaging has hallmark appearances of such a macerated fetus showing multiple fetal parts embedded in a calcified sac termed as
lithopedion
or stone baby. We report a unique case of retained abdominal pregnancy for 36 years in a 60-year-old postmenopausal female presented with
abdominal pain
and difficulty in micturition. Computed tomography showed multiple fetal bones in the abdomen surrounded by a membrane which was surprisingly not calcified.
...
PMID:An unusual case of retained abdominal pregnancy for 36 years in a postmenopausal woman. 2653 74
We report a case of a 77-year-old female who was admitted to the emergency department complaining of diffuse
abdominal pain
for five days, associated with nausea, vomiting and constipation. Physical examination disclosed a large incarcerated umbilical hernia, which was readily apparent on supine abdominal plain films. These also showed a calcified heterogeneous mass in the mid-abdominal region, which was further characterized by CT as a
lithopedion
(calcified ectopic pregnancy). This is one of the few cases studied on a MDCT equipment, and it clearly enhances the post-processing abilities of this imaging method which allows diagnostic high-quality MIP images.
Lithopedion
is a rare entity, with less than 300 cases previously described in the medical literature. However, many reported cases corresponded to cases of skeletonization or collections of fetal bone fragments discovered encysted in the pelvic region at surgery or autopsy. It is thus estimated that true
lithopedion
is a much rarer entity. The diagnosis may be reached by a suggestive clinical history and a palpable mass on physical examination, while the value of modern cross-sectional techniques is still virtually unknown. Ultrasonography may depict an empty uterine cavity and a calcified abdominal mass of non-specific characteristics, and computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging are able to reach a conclusive diagnosis and may additionally define the involvement of adjacent structures. The differential diagnosis includes other calcified pathologic situations, including ovarian tumors, uterine fibroids, urinary tract neoplasms, inflammatory masses or epiploic calcifications.
...
PMID:An unusual cause of intra-abdominal calcification: A lithopedion. 2693 28