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

Twelve patients with meconium ileus equivalent complicating cystic fibrosis in the postneonatal period were seen at the Mayo Clinic in the years 1950 through 1975. In a child or young adult with known or suspected cystic fibrosis, the triad of recurrent colicky abdominal pain, a mass in the right lower quadrant, and mechanical intestinal obstruction provides a clue to diagnosis of meconium ileus equivalent. The clinical suspicion of meconium ileus equivalent may be confirmed by meglumine diatrizoate (Gastrografin) enema, which in most uncomplicated cases also serves as treatment.
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PMID:Meconium ileus equivalent complicating cystic fibrosis in postneonatal children and young adults. Report of 12 cases. 83 31

Commercially available surgical gloves contain a derivative of cornstarch and peritonitis induced by particles of starch shed from gloves can be a serious complication of abdominal surgery. Five documented and two suspected cases of this condition are known to have occurred at this institution during a recent 12-month period, when 4,965 intra-abdominal procedures were performed. Clinical features included fever, migratory abdominal pain, and ileus. Treatment with corticosteroids proved effective. Studies of the effectiveness of operating room precautions used to eliminate starch contamination indicated that these precautions do not eliminate the problem completely. Preliminary experience with the use of sodium bicarbonate as a substitute for cornstarch derivatives to "lubricate" surgical gloves has proved promising in eliminating the hazard of starch peritonitis.
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PMID:Starch peritonitis and its prevention. 84 52

The clinical findings and pathological changes in a 14 year old boy who died from severe malabsorption are presented. Early signs of the illness were attacks of abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and intermittent periods of constipation. Later, severe malabsorption together with chronic ileus were apparent but no organic obstruction was found at several laparotomies. X-ray examination revealed extremly distended intestinal loops and a very slow transit time of barium. Malnutrition could not be improved by dietary, medical, or surgical therapy. Microscopic examination of the tissues obtained at autopsy showed changes in the small vessels of the lungs, heart, kidneys, and intestine. Increased fibrous tissue combined with atrophy of the muscular coat was observed in the wall of the entire intestine. Although cutaneous changes of scleroderma were not evident the deposition of collagenous material and the vascular changes seem typical of systemic sclerosis.
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PMID:Sclerosis of the intestinal tract with severe malabsorption. 89 73

Retrograde jejunogastric invagination is a rare late complication of operations on the stomach. Clinically signs and symptoms (colic-like upper abdominal pain, cyclindrical resistance and hematemesis) resemble that of high ileus. This complication, when wrongly interpreted or unknown, has a high mortality. One case following delivery shows the radiologic signs.
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PMID:[Radiologic diagnosis of retrograde jejunogastric invagination following gastrectomy]. 96 74

A 75-year-old black man came to the emergency room because of nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and distension and obstipation. An abdominal radiograph revealed a sigmoid volvulus. This was nonoperatively reduced in the emergency room. Following a mechanical and antibiotic bowel preparation, the patient underwent elective exploration. We report, for the first time, operative treatment of sigmoid volvulus with a laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid colectomy and primary anastomosis. Because of dense fibrous scarring of the sigmoid mesentery produced by chronic mesosigmoiditis, the redundant sigmoid was exteriorized and resected extracorporeally. A stapled, side-to-side, functional end-to-end anastomosis was constructed. The patient experienced little postoperative pain and virtually no postoperative ileus. We believe that laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid resection may offer distinct advantages for the treatment of the typically elderly, debilitated patient in whom sigmoid volvulus develops. Furthermore, because of the characteristic mesosigmoiditis associated with sigmoid volvulus, we suspect that exteriorization and extracorporeal resection may prove the easiest and most rapid laparoscopic approach to this disease.
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PMID:Laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid colectomy for sigmoid volvulus. 134 64

A 34-year-old male living in Aichi Prefecture, Japan, complained of lower abdominal pain. Ileus was suspected based on his clinical history and symptoms, and a laparotomy was performed. Four sections of a nematode were found in a large eosinophilic granuloma in the intestinal wall, and were identified as the larva of a spiruroid nematode. This is the third reported case of a spiruroid nematode infection found in the ileum.
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PMID:A case of ileus caused by a spiruroid nematode. 142 17

We report the case of a patient on dialysis for 13 years, including continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) for 11 years, who developed sclerosing peritonitis with gross peritoneal calcification. The patient first presented with abdominal pain in January 1990, when peritoneal calcification was detected for the first time. Her symptoms settled spontaneously and 1 year later she presented with acute peritonitis and adynamic ileus. The peritonitis settled with antibiotics and Tenchkoff catheter removal, but the ileus persisted. She was commenced on long-term parenteral nutrition, but never recovered useful bowel function. After 8 weeks of hemodialysis and total parenteral nutrition, a further laparotomy for an acute abdomen showed what appeared to be extensive bowel infarction and peritoneal calcification. She died several days later. Of significance, peritoneal calcification was first noted on x-ray and computed tomography (CT) scan while the patient was still largely asymptomatic and before peritoneal ultrafiltration capacity was significantly impaired. Unlike other reported cases of calcifying peritonitis, sclerosing peritonitis was present and calcification was far more extensive. It was not associated with factors such as frequent infective peritonitis or acetate dialysate. Calciphylaxis was not present nor was there any abnormality of calcium-phosphate metabolism. The outcome of this case suggests that patients with recurrent or persistent bowel symptoms on long-term CAPD should have early abdominal x-ray or CT scanning to exclude sclerosing peritonitis or bowel calcification. If present, consideration should be given to transferring the patient to another therapeutic dialysis modality if possible.
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PMID:Sclerosing peritonitis with gross peritoneal calcification: a case report. 146 95

Intestinal occlusion is a rare pathologic event during pregnancy occurring mostly in the second and third trimenon when increased volume of the uterus and the consequent displacement of abdominal organs cause complications of pathologies which would otherwise escape notice, such as intestinal adhesions, to become manifest. Diagnosis is difficult for a number of reasons. Vomiting during the first trimenon and mild abdominal pain during the third are often neglected or considered to be part of the normal course of pregnancy; pain is sometimes referred to atypical sites due to the displacement of abdominal organs; in other cases, the high endorphin tonus is apt to reduce the customary defence reaction. All this should not cause time to be lost, and whenever intestinal occlusion is suspected all the necessary diagnostic procedures must at once be carried out and appropriate therapy must speedily be started so as to reduce the risk of mortality and morbidity for mother and fetus. Management of ileus in pregnancy is identical to that for the non pregnant woman, except for the need to empty the uterus in cases in which it prevents treatment or if the fetus has reached a sufficient degree of pulmonary maturity. The paper describes a case of ileal volvulus and revisits the literature analyzing the diagnostic and therapeutic options suggested.
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PMID:[Intestinal volvulus in pregnancy]. 149 64

Clostridium difficile-associated pseudomembranous colitis is an increasingly common nosocomial infection that usually responds to oral antibiotics. Presentation as an acute abdomen occurred in 12 patients, leading to 14 laparotomies. A distinctive clinical picture was observed: advanced age, recent treatment with antibiotics, fever, abdominal pain, tenderness, marked leukocytosis, and ileus. Only six of the 12 patients had diarrhea. Five were immunosuppressed. Abdominal computed tomographic scans revealed ascites and a massively thickened colonic wall. All four patients treated by subtotal colectomy survived. Four of 10 patients treated only with laparotomy or segmental colectomy died, four responded to medical therapy, and the conditions of two deteriorated but were salvaged by subtotal colectomy. Early diagnosis via endoscopy or computed tomography should obviate the need for exploratory operations. However, progressive toxic effects indicate failure of medical therapy and the need for subtotal colectomy.
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PMID:Laparotomy for fulminant pseudomembranous colitis. 152 85

Melanoma frequently disseminates to the gastrointestinal tract, being found post-mortem in 60 per cent of patients with disseminated disease, while during life it is diagnosed in only 4 per cent. During the period 1981-87, 835 melanoma patients were referred and 30 developed complaints caused by gastrointestinal metastatic melanoma. Twenty-three patients were treated surgically. The interval between treatment of the primary melanoma and detection of intestinal involvement was a median of 34 months (range 2-87 months). In four patients recurrence in the gut was the first evidence of dissemination. Major complaints were nausea and vomiting, abdominal pain, signs of anaemia, and blood in the stools. Complications were bleeding (ten cases), ileus due to intussusception (five cases), bowel perforation (four cases) and cholecystitis (one case). The metastases, mainly localized in the small bowel, were removed by relatively simple procedures. Symptoms were reduced in 19 patients. Two patients died after operation: one from sepsis due to suture leakage, the other from pneumonia and a cerebrovascular accident. Of the remaining patients, 16 survived a median of 7.5 (range 0.7-32.0) months. Five patients are still alive 72, 72, 70, 7 and 2 months after the metastasectomy, three of whom are tumour-free. The actuarial 5-year survival of all patients is 19 per cent. These results support surgical intervention for patients with complaints and/or complications attributable to gastrointestinal metastatic melanoma.
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PMID:Surgery for melanoma metastatic to the gastrointestinal tract. 168 96


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