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

Twelve patients with cavernous hemangiomas of the liver were treated by surgical resection from 1982 to 1991. There were three male and nine female patients. Their ages ranged from 31 to 62 with a mean of 49. All except one with gall bladder polyp had abdominal pain. Preoperatively, dynamic computerized tomographic scans performed on three patients produced accurate diagnoses, while angiography was correct in only 2 out of 7 patients. The indications for operation were suspected hepatoma in five, symptomatic pain in three, intraperitoneal hemorrhage resulting from biopsy in one, intrahepatic stone with suspicion of cholangioma in one, abdominal mass mimicking a gastric leiomyosarcoma in one and incidental laparotomy in a final patient. Surgical treatment resulted in no operative mortalities apart from one delayed death from cirrhotic decompensation occurring four months postoperatively. Morbidity included one patient with a postoperative hemorrhage and one with bile leakage, however, both of them were discharged uneventfully. During the follow up period from 6 to 72 months, no more abdominal pain attacked in those three patients with preoperative symptomatic pain. Three patients developed multiple recurrent hemangiomas. No identifiable causes were readily apparent. We conclude that the preoperative differentiation between hemangioma and hepatoma in a hepatic lesion is very important. When necessary, such as a giant symptomatic hemangioma of the liver can be safely resected without significant complications.
...
PMID:Resectional therapy for a giant cavernous hemangioma of the liver. 785 Jun 47

We present the case of a 41-year-old woman who presented with gross hematuria, urinary urgency and frequency, and intermittent abdominal pain after vaginal hysterectomy 2 years prior. The presence of an adnexal mass was suspected by pelvic examination and confirmed by transvaginal pelvic ultrasonography. Cystoscopy with biopsy was consistent with an inflammatory bladder polyp, which was initially discovered by pelvic ultrasonography and noted to be contiguous with the adnexal mass. The patient underwent exploratory laparotomy, lysis of adhesions, left salpingoophorectomy, and transvesical resection of the bladder mass. Histology was consistent with ovarian abscess and chronic sinus tract formation that was contiguous with an inflammatory bladder polyp.
...
PMID:Polypoid cystitis resulting from ovarian abscess. 1684 87