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

In 19 patients with gastrointestinal tumors the diagnosis was made by ultrasound. 7 patients were examined for further investigation of an abdominal mass; 12 patients, presented with symptoms suggesting malignants, e. g. weight loss, vomiting, fever, abdominal pain, and/or anaemia from bloodloss were first investigated by ultrasound. In 5 patients with colon tumors, diagnosed by ultrasound, a resection and anastomosis was possible. 13 cases were found to be inoperable during laparotomy, one patient had an ileocolitis Crohn with stenosis. Ultrasonic examination with real-time scanning technique proved to be a valuable method as a screening procedure for patients with suspected gastrointestinal tumors. During the same procedure local (mesenteric) or liver metastases can be detected. A normal abdominal ultrasonography does not exclude malignant intestinal lesions in any location during the early stage and in the region of cardia and rectum even in the more advanced stage.
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PMID:[The use of ultrasound in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal tumors (author's transl)]. 68 40

The authors retrospectively reviewed the records of 50 patients whose initial diagnosis of Crohn's disease was made after the age of 50 years on the basis of strict histopathologic criteria. Progress of the 32 women and 18 men with a median age of 60 years (range, 50 to 78 years) was followed for a median of 95.5 months (range, 81.1 to 236.6 months). The most common presenting signs and symptoms were abdominal pain (82 percent), diarrhea (70 percent), weight loss (56 percent), bleeding from the gastrointestinal tract (26 percent), abdominal mass (16 percent), and fistula (14 percent). Initial operations performed were ileocolic resection (38 percent), proctocolectomy (16 percent), small bowel resection (10 percent), colostomy (2 percent), and a variety of segmental resections of the colon (34 percent). The overall recurrence rate of disease in patients in whom all obvious disease was resected, based on distribution of disease, was 80 percent (ileocolitis), 38 percent (ileitis), and 35 percent (colitis). Crohn's disease more often affects the distal gastrointestinal tract in older age groups. After resection, however, the clinical course is similar to that of the younger population. The high recurrence rate of Crohn's colitis is probably a result of the large number of initial segmental resections.
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PMID:Clinical course of Crohn's disease in older patients. A retrospective study. 235 Sep 97

Yersinia enterocolitica causes primarily ileocolitis in human beings, and is manifested by abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fever. Usually, it is a self-limiting disease. Local or systemic complications are rare. A 71-year-old man with Y enterocolitica colitis complicated by perforation and abscess formation is described. This complication is very rare, and the four other cases that have been reported in the literature are reviewed.
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PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica infection complicated by intestinal perforation. 330 74

The terminal ileum and proximal colon were resected in two children presenting with fever and right lower quadrant abdominal pain. The pathological findings were characteristic; elongated ulcerations with underlying lymphoid hyperplasia involved the distal ileum and smaller punctate aphthoid ulcers involved the distal ileum and colon. Transmural inflammation was seen in both cases and resulted in thickened, erythematous distal ileum mistaken at surgery for Crohn's disease. Yersinia enterocolitica was recovered from operative cultures of both the specimens. One of the two patients had a 1:1280 serological titer for Yersinia enterocolitica 1 week after surgery. The pathologic findings of Yersinia enterocolitica ileocolitis are distinctive and easily differentiated from Crohn's disease and other pathologic processes in this region. Operative diagnosis can be difficult but if the possibility of Yersinia infection is considered, the correct diagnosis can usually be made without unnecessary surgical resection.
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PMID:The pathology of Yersinia enterocolitica ileocolitis. 711 60

In order to examine the presentation and course of Crohn's disease (CD) versus those of ulcerative colitis (UC) in children < or = 10 years of age, a retrospective review of children < or = 10 years old with inflammatory bowel disease singled out 40 patients and compared their findings with those of 38 children with UC. The mean age at onset was 7.5 years for CD, as compared with 5.9 years for UC. A family history of inflammatory bowel disease was present in 13 patients (32%). Abdominal pain (97%), diarrhea (78%), and weight loss (88%) were the major initial complaints, with growth retardation present in 12 (30%) children. At onset, four children had diffuse small-bowel disease, nine had terminal ileal disease, 15 had ileocolitis, and 12 had colitis; at the end of the study two had diffuse small-bowel disease, four had terminal ileal disease, 25 had ileocolitis, and seven had colitis. Extra-intestinal manifestations increased with duration of disease. Although the number of recurrences did not differ greatly between groups, those with ileocolitis and colitis needed longer steroid therapy and more days in hospital than did those with only small-bowel disease. Operation was required in 42.5% of children with CD, as compared with 5% of those with UC, with six CD children (35%) requiring later reoperation for recurrent disease or fistula and abscess. Two children died from causes unrelated to their disease (gastric volvulus, carcinoma of the breast).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Crohn's disease in children 10 years old and younger: comparison with ulcerative colitis. 857 7

Thirty-eight children (21 male, 17 female, age 3-18 years), treated for Crohn disease in two Dutch university centres, were retrospectively studied in order to evaluate the results of conservative treatment and to find out in what way surgical treatment in this age group may have differed from treating adults with this disease. Both groups had an equal distribution of age and sex. Diarrhoea with discharge of blood and mucus, abdominal pain, nausea/vomiting, weight loss, fever and general discomfort were the most frequent presenting symptoms. Twenty-three children (60%) showed signs of malabsorption; 4 children (10%) had growth retardation. In 27 children (70%), 63 surgical procedures were performed (2.4 operations per child). There was no surgical mortality. Most operations were performed for ileocolitis and colon-only localizations needed most re-operations. Of the surgical procedures performed, 55% were excisional procedures. Already 3 years after the onset of symptoms, 50% of all children had had their first resection, whereas in adults, 50% of the patients undergo surgery 8 years after disease onset. Eight children were treated with split ileostomy. In only one of these children, operated for non-toxic colitis and severe steroid-dependent growth retardation, could the colon eventually be saved. The time between the onset of symptoms and the first operation seems to be shorter in children compared to adults. Severe malabsorption and growth retardation are additional specific indications for surgery for Crohn disease in childhood. The latter combined with non-toxic colitis, may perhaps be the only indication left for performing split ileostomy in Crohn disease.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of Crohn disease in children and adolescents; how conservative can the paediatrician be? 822 1

Although Crohn's disease (CD) is generally found in the ileum and/or colon, since the 1960s it has become evident that this chronic inflammatory disorder of unknown aetiology can affect the whole gastrointestinal tract from mouth to anus. In 0.5-13% of patients with ileocolonic CD the disease occurs in the upper gastrointestinal tract as well (i.e., from mouth through jejunum). With the radiological double-contrast technique, however, early signs of upper gastrointestinal CD may be detected in 20-40% of patients with ileocolitis. On the other hand, histologically evaluated biopsies from the lower oesophagus, body of the stomach, gastric antrum and the duodenal bulb of patients with Crohn's disease from whom the upper gastrointestinal tract is normal, according to X-ray or endoscopy may reveal lesions, which are considered to be pathologically diagnostic. Jejunal involvement occurs in 4-10% of patients with ileitis, ileocolitis or colitis. In early studies biopsies of apparently normal buccal mucosa from patients with Crohn's disease showed a significant correlation between the activity of the disease, as defined by the Crohn's Disease Activity Index, and the number of plasma cells containing IgM, suggesting a generalized activated humoral defence system during relapse. A diagnosis of Crohn's disease of the upper gastrointestinal tract can be achieved by combining recognition of clinical, roentgenographic, and endoscopic features. Provided that other causes of granulomatous involvement of the gastrointestinal tract can be excluded, non-caseating granulomas are generally accepted as the histological proof of Crohn's disease. When Crohn's disease does involve the upper gastrointestinal tract, there is nearly always concomitant disease in the small bowel or colon. Compared to patients with an ileocolonic localization, patients with Crohn's disease in the upper gastrointestinal tract more frequently have colic-like abdominal pain and/or cramps, nausea and anorexia as presenting symptoms and are younger at onset of the disease. Medical therapeutic principles are the same as for Crohn's disease elsewhere in the gastrointestinal tract. Absolute indications for surgical treatment are massive bleeding, progressive stenosis, and extensive fistula formation.
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PMID:Crohn's disease of the upper gastrointestinal tract. 905 Mar 25

Metastatic Crohn's disease is a rare complication in Crohn's disease and there have been only several cases of metastatic Crohn's disease involving the penis. We report one such case. A 22-year-old male student developed anal pain and alternative constipation and diarrhea in December, 1985, followed by diarrhea and lower abdominal pain in January, 1986. He was diagnosed as having Crohn's disease of ileocolitis type. He was admitted to our hospital in July, 1987 because of exacerbation of Crohn's disease. He had anal tags. Soon after admission, two red swollen lesions with central ulcer and erosions were demonstrated at the eversion of the foreskin adjacent to coronal sulcus. Histology of the lesions revealed granulomas with epithelioid cells and giant cells. The lesion responded to a topical steroid. Eight cases of metastatic Crohn's disease involving the penis are briefly reviewed.
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PMID:Metastatic Crohn's disease involving the penis. 943 23

Severe systemic manifestations of adult onset Still's disease (AOSD) are often fatal and occasionally related to hemophagocytic syndrome (HS). We describe the case of a 49-yr-old woman with AOSD presenting with non-remitting high fever, confusion, jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly, serositis, azotemia, pancytopenia, coagulopathy with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), hyperferritinemia, acute acalculous cholecystitis and ileocolitis noted in computed tomographic images. The patient had a history of herpes zoster developed prior to the admission, but there is no history of diarrhea or abdominal pain. Although bone marrow examination was not performed due to hemorrhagic diathesis, we suspected AOSD-associated HS on the basis of clinical course without detectable infectious agents in cultures or serologic studies. Intravenous immunoglobulin, pulse methylprednisolone, oral cyclosporine A (CsA) and ceftriaxone brought about transient improvement of fever and confusion, but the disease progressed. After increasing CsA dose, all previously mentioned abnormalities disappeared rapidly. Accordingly, we believe that DIC and multiple organ dysfunctions might have been the complications of HS but not that of sepsis, and that CsA can be used as a first-line therapy in case of life-threatening situations.
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PMID:Adult-onset Still's disease with disseminated intravascular coagulation and multiple organ dysfunctions dramatically treated with cyclosporine A. 1496 57

A case of a 38 year-old male patient, from Lima, with a three-year period illness, characterized by abdominal pain, diarrhea, ponderal weight loss and fever is showed. He is examined by colonoscopy, with endoscopic diagnosis of colon cancer and undergoes surgery. The histopathological diagnosis was severe acute and chronic ulcerative ileocolitis, suggesting Crohn disease. A month later he again showed abdominal pain, diarrhea and fever, so a new colonoscopy is performed revealing multiple ileum ulcers and in the anastomotic area. The biopsy revealed an acute and chronic inflammatory process. The colon radiography showed a filling defect and irregularity in the cecum, and the upper endoscopy revealed esophageal ulcers. In addition, a number of analyses were carried out, such as: coproculture, HIV, and VK on sputum and feces, as well as CEA dosage, resulting all of them negative. The thorax radiography was also normal.He was diagnosed with Crohn's disease and was treated with mesalacin. Evolution was fast, showing weight gain, which allowed the discharge of the patient from the hospital seven (7) days later. The anatomical pathology never did confirm the final diagnosis, which brings us to the question:Are the granulomas always necessary for the final diagnosis of Crohn's disease?
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PMID:[Are granulomas necessary for the final diagnosis of Crohn disease?]. 1524 96


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