Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 23-year-old man with epilepsy and a past history of
abdominal pain
and
ileus
, developed hypertension and arm and bulbar weakness when valproic acid and carbamazepine were reinitiated. Electrophysiologic studies demonstrated a peripheral neuropathy with features of axonal degeneration and demyelination. Axonal degeneration was documented by sural nerve biopsy. Markedly elevated urinary delta-aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen indicated a diagnosis of acute porphyria. Other laboratory studies were most consistent with hereditary coproporphyria. Motor function improved considerably but incompletely over 1 year. An acute, primarily motor neuropathy can occur in several forms of porphyria, including acute intermittent porphyria, variegate porphyria, and hereditary coproporphyria, sometimes even in the absence of concomitant gastrointestinal symptoms.
...
PMID:Acute peripheral neuropathy due to hereditary coproporphyria. 800 8
A 59 yr old woman who had multiple ileal ulcers following side-to-side anastomosis without bowel resection is reported. She had a surgical history of adhesive
ileus
15 yrs earlier, and was admitted with a complaint of lower
abdominal pain
. A barium meal study showed a stagnant and dilated distal ileum. At laparotomy, a previously performed side-to-side ileal anastomosis was encountered, and a markedly dilated bypassed loop was recognized. The affected intestine was resected revealing multiple longitudinal ulcers and small shallow ulcers mostly located on the mesenteric side. This feature is similar to that of ischemic enteritis. This case further supports the fact that when side-to-side anastomosis is performed as a bypass operation, multiple ulcers may develop in a bypassed loop after a long period of time.
...
PMID:Blind loop syndrome: multiple ileal ulcers following side-to-side anastomosis. 816 8
In the period 1968-1989 50 patients, 38 women and 12 men, aged 30-76 years, median 58 years, were referred to the Department of Gastroenterology, Rigshospitalet for severe chronic radiation enteropathy. Most women had received radiation for gynaecological cancer, and most men for urogenital cancer. The initial symptoms of the enteropathy were diarrhoea in 74%,
abdominal pain
in 62% and weight loss in 52%. Twelve per cent had visible blood in the stools. Ten per cent had fistulas. The symptoms occurred 0-37 years, median ten months after the radiation. The radiation enteropathy had necessitated one or more laparotomies in 35 patients, most often because of subileus/
ileus
, including resection of the small bowel or the colon in 25 patients, and establishment of an ileostomy or a colostomy in 11. Seven patients developed new fistulas postoperatively. In 32 patients one or more tests for malabsorption were performed as a guidance for therapy: stool mass (26 patients), faecal fat excretion (26 patients), Schilling test (22 patients), lactose absorption (11 patients) and bile acid breath test (seven patients). Half of the patients had diarrhoea, including one third of the patients without intestinal resection. Two thirds had steatorrhoea, including half of the patients without small bowel resection. Three fourths showed decreased absorption of vitamin B12, including half of the patients without ileal resection. All patients studied had abnormal deconjugation of bile acids and more than half of them had bile acid malabsorption. Malabsorption of lactose was found in only one patient. There was no correlation between the radiological and functional abnormalities of the small intestine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Chronic radiation enteropathy. A retrospective study]. 827 44
Three of 87 children with blunt liver injuries initially managed without operation required late intervention for bile leakage. Abdominal computed tomography scans in these patients showed liver injuries extending into the porta hepatis. Clinical courses were characterized by persistent
abdominal pain
, low-grade fever, and prolonged
ileus
. Radionucleide scan confirmed the suspicion of bile leakage. One patient had complete transection of the common bile duct, which was repaired surgically. Another had partial transection of the left hepatic duct, managed successfully with transampullary biliary decompression. The third patient with an intrahepatic injury was managed with a drain placed at celiotomy. Nonoperative management of blunt pediatric liver injuries carries a risk of persistent bile leakage. Radionucleide scan and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography are reliable modes of diagnosis and localization. Transampullary biliary decompression is a newer, effective modality for management of the proximal and/or partial bile duct injuries. Treatment must be individualized according to the site and extent of injury.
...
PMID:Blunt bile duct injuries in children. 833 5
Although an acute abdomen often occurs in lupus patients, definitive treatment is commonly delayed due to the difficulty in diagnosis. We performed an abdominal ultrasound (US) in two patients with severe
abdominal pain
and recognized mural thickenings of intestinal walls. In the first case high dose prednisone was given for severe
abdominal pain
, with subsequent perforation of sigmoid colon. Pathological specimens showed a thrombotic vasculitis in the mesenteric artery and arteriole of intestinal walls. In the second case physical examination elicited a rebound tenderness. An abdominal X-ray demonstrated a gasless
ileus
and US also showed marked thickening of intestinal walls, 16 mm in thickness. A CT scan revealed the same findings in the entire bowel. After high dose methylprednisolone was administered, her symptoms markedly improved. The mural thickenings disappeared within 10 days as seen by abdominal ultrasound examination. The US is very useful in order to make an early diagnosis of intestinal vasculitis, showing as edema (but non-specific) of intestinal wall and we can use it safely and repetitively without exposure to radiation, compared with other examinations, such as CT scan and gastrointestinal contrast study etc. The US is not only useful in diagnosis, but also helpful for follow up of patients after the initiation of treatment.
...
PMID:[Vasculitis-related acute abdomen in systemic lupus erythematosus--ultrasound appearances in lupus patients with intra-abdominal vasculitis]. 834 66
In a series of 650 consecutive laparoscopic cholecystectomies, nine bile leaks were identified (1.4%). Patients with bile leaks presented clinically at a mean of 4.9 days (range: 3-8 days) after surgery complaining of diffuse
abdominal pain
,
ileus
, and nausea. Laboratory values for complete blood counts and liver function tests were all mildly elevated. Definitive diagnosis was made on the basis of abnormal hepatobiliary scintigraphy. Management strategies included laparotomy and drain placement (n = 1), laparoscopy and drain placement (n = 3), ERCP and drainage (n = 4), and CT-guided percutaneous drainage (n = 1). When the etiology of the leakage was identified, it was most commonly either dysfunction of the cystic duct clips (n = 3) or leakage from a disrupted duct of Luschka (n = 2). The source of the remaining leaks (n = 4) was never determined. We conclude that bile leaks are an uncommon cause of morbidity following laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Diagnosis can usually be made with nuclear medicine biliary tract scans and a variety of managements alternatives are successful in treating this complication.
...
PMID:Management of bile leaks following laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 835 98
From January 1984 to October 1991, 11 consecutive patients with complication of Salmonella infection received surgical intervention at our hospital. The age at operation ranged from 4 days to 8 years old, with a mean of 1 year and 8 months. Most of them (64%) were under the age of one year. Eight cases were male, 3 cases were female. The most common pathogen was Salmonella paratyphi Gr. B (73%); the most common presenting symptoms and signs were
abdominal pain
(82%), pyrexia (82%) and muscle guarding (82%). The indications for surgery included pneumoperitoneum (55%), peritonitis (36%) and intestinal obstruction (9%); 6 cases received one stage operation, 5 cases received staged operations (enterostomy). The most commonly involved organ was ileum (54%). Ceftriazone (rocephin) was the drug of choice for the first 2 weeks postoperatively. Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) was used for at least 2 weeks. The postoperative complications included adhesion
ileus
(9%), high output enterostomy (9%), reperforation (9%), and wound infection (18%); there was no surgical mortality. Prompt diagnosis, early resuscitation and operative management are mandatory to avoid mortality.
...
PMID:Surgical management of complicated gastrointestinal salmonellosis in children. 837 76
A 72-year-old woman presented with periods of colicky
abdominal pain
following endoscopic sphincterotomy and lithotripsy for choledocholithiasis. A diagnosis of intermittent gallstone
ileus
was made, while it appeared that a large gallstone, that was not removed from the common bile duct, obstructed the small bowel. The intermittent course was elicited by pendulation of a gallstone between two stenoses, which originated from chronic radiation enteritis.
...
PMID:Intermittent gallstone ileus following endoscopic biliary sphincterotomy. A case report. 847 Apr 43
A case of intestinal angiocentric T-cell lymphoma is reported, occurring in a 72-year-old female who had suffered from poor appetite, body weight loss and
abdominal pain
for two months. Plain abdominal film revealed
ileus
, and she received laparotomy under the impression of ischemic bowel. Surprisingly, pathologic examination disclosed an angiocentric T-cell lymphoma of jejunum complicated with focal intestinal necrosis. This case emphasizes the angiocentric and angioinvasive character of some T-cell lymphomas. Angiocentric T-cell lymphoma must be considered as a possible cause of ischemic bowel.
...
PMID:Ischemic bowel secondary to angiocentric T-cell lymphoma of intestine: a case report. 854 71
We studied ten cases with
abdominal pain
after eating raw firefly squid, Watasenia scintillans, Hotaruika. Characteristic clinical features were
abdominal pain
, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, creeping eruption and
ileus
with ascites. In ten patients, there were all cases with
abdominal pain
, nine with nausea and vomiting, four with diarrhea, one with creeping eruption, six with
ileus
. Laboratory examination revealed eosinophilia on peripheral blood in ten cases and high serum IgE value in nine cases. The infection rate of type X lavae of the suborder spirurina in Watasenia scintillans is almost 3%, so we measured the antibody to type X larvae of the suborder spirurina in nine patients by indirect fluorescent antibody method and the antibody titer was positive in seven cases. Most patients recovered in several days from first visit. But one patient was diagnosed peritonitis and operated with partial ileectomy. Pathological finding of resected specimen showed an erosion in the mucosal layer and an inflammation with marked eosinophilia in the submucosal layer. These results suggest that abdominal complaints after eating Watasenia scintillans are due to type X larvae of the suborder spirurina.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of ten cases with acute abdomen after eating raw firefly squid (Watasenia scintillans, Hotaruika), which are probably due to type X larvae of the suborder spirurina]. 864 68
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>