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

Report is made of a case of an unusual localization of a trichobezoar in a 12 year-old girl, who presented vomiting and abdominal pain as chief complaints. She was found to have an 18 X 5 cm palpable abdominal mass, which upon surgery was localized in terminal ileum and in the pathology report was found to be a trichobezoar. The interest of this case is the unusual localization of a single bezoar and the fact that a resection of 25 cm. of small bowel had to be done, as it was found necrotic at the time of surgery.
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PMID:[A case of intestinal trichobezoar]. 97 56

Recurrent abdominal pain in a two years old toddler and a sixteen years old girl were caused by huge trichobezoars, which in one case had a weight of 412 g and provoked a gastric ulcus. Removal was possible only by gastrotomy. Deprivation in infancy and childhood in combination with slight mental retardation had led the teenager to trichtillomania and -phagia for years and finally to a bezoar. A short historic survey of the variety and therapy of bezoars is added.
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PMID:[Trichobezoar. A rare cause of recurrent upper abdominal pain]. 147 Jan 87

We discovered an unusual bezoar in a previously healthy man who had been ingesting large amounts of a vegetable-derived oil touted to contain lecithin, which he purchased from health food stores in the belief that it had beneficial effects in lowering cholesterol levels and improving memory. The large intragastric mass, composed of fatty acids and lecithin, led to considerable morbidity, including abdominal pain, early satiety, and significant weight loss, and required surgical removal.
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PMID:Gastric bezoar caused by lecithin: an unusual complication of health faddism. 159 Mar 24

Abdominal symptoms in mentally retarded patients may pose difficult diagnostic problems due to an unreliable history of disease and incooperation of the patients. The case histories are presented of three patients with bezoars in the ileum. Delayed diagnosis and signs of peritonitis necessitated emergency surgery. All patients could successfully be treated by small bowel resection and primary anastomosis. In mentally retarded patients with abdominal pain a bezoar must be considered.
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PMID:Bezoars: a special cause of ileal obstruction in mentally retarded patients. 182 45

Bezoars are concretions formed in the gastrointestinal tract. The trichobezoars are hairballs in the stomach or intestines composed of hair. They are usually found in young girls as in our case which we operated in April 1989 on Surgical Ward in Kartal State Hospital in Istanbul. The postgastrectomy state predisposes to bezoar formation. Persimmon peels or pits, orange or grapefruit pulp are the usual offenders. Bezoars are associated with vague upper gastrointestinal discomfort, nausea, and vomiting. The patients may complain of abdominal pain. Ulceration, bleeding, obstruction, and perforation are the most common complications. Treatment consist of mechanical fragmentation via the endoscope or operative extraction. Dissolution of the undigested bolus by ingestion of proteolytic enzymes such as papain may be tried. As prophylaxis the postgastrectomy patient must be warned of ingesting citrus fruits.
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PMID:[Occlusion of the gastric outlet caused by a trichobezoar]. 209 9

A chart review from 1975 to 1985 at the Toronto Western Hospital identified 16 patients (9 women and 7 men, between the ages of 39 and 83 years) with gastrointestinal phytobezoars. Nine had previously undergone vagotomy and drainage procedures. There were two distinct clinical groups, dependent on the location gastric bezoars presented with chronic burning epigastric pain and nausea and vomiting in addition to anorexia and weight loss. Six of seven patients with small-bowel bezoars had acute small-bowel obstruction, manifested by crampy abdominal pain, vomiting and obstipation. In the seventh patient the bezoar was found incidentally in an efferent loop during endoscopy. Gastric bezoars were all diagnosed by endoscopy; patients with small-bowel bezoars had x-ray films compatible with small-bowel obstruction. The obstructing small-bowel bezoars were found at midileum and proximal jejunum. Five patients underwent proximal enterotomy with bezoar removal; in one the bezoar was milked distally into the cecum. One patient also had multiple nonobstructing small-bowel bezoars removed through the single enterotomy and another had a separate gastrotomy for removal of a gastric bezoar. The postoperative courses were uncomplicated except for wound infection in one patient. None of the patients with an isolated gastric bezoar required surgery. Three patients were successfully treated with gastric lavage and the others with clear fluid diet.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal phytobezoars: presentation and management. 377 44

A 26-year-old lady presented with a history of abdominal pain and distension since two months. The ultrasound examination showed an epigastric mass, which was delineated as a filling defect in the stomach on barium studies. The computerised tomographic scan showed a gastric mass with pockets of air in it, without post-contrast enhancement. This case highlights the characteristic appearance on computerised tomography of a bezoar within the stomach, a feature that is not commonly described in medical literature.
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PMID:An intragastric trichobezoar: computerised tomographic appearance. 1101 73

Bezoar is described as presence of indigested or poorly digested material forming a mass in the gastrointestinal lumen. Patients may present with abdominal pain, dyspeptic complaints, gastrointestinal obstruction, perforation or bleeding, as well as, incidental abdominal mass in asymptomatic patients. We report a 30-year-old female patient with no history of previous illness who was presented to the emergency ward with complaints of epigastric pain and abdominal bloating. The diagnostic features and treatment of bezoar are presented.
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PMID:An unusual etiology of epigastric mass. 1575 66

Whereas small gastric bezoars may be removed endoscopically, large bezoars traditionally are removed at laparotomy. We describe a 33-year-old mentally retarded woman with pica syndrome who had experienced episodes of upper abdominal pain and distension of 10 months duration. Gastroscopy showed a large bezoar in the stomach, and attempted endoscopic removal was unsuccessful. The patient underwent laparoscopic extraction of the bezoar, which proved to be an ingested glove. She made an uneventful recovery and was discharged home on postoperative day 1. She had no wound complications, and her symptoms had not recurred at a 3-month follow up assessment. The operative technique is described, and the merits of the laparoscopic approach are discussed.
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PMID:Laparoscopic removal of a large gastric bezoar in a mentally retarded patient with pica. 1576 58

A diospyrobezoar is a type of phytobezoar that is considered to be harder than any other types of phytobezoars. Here, we describe a new treatment modality, which effectively and easily disrupted huge gastric diospyrobezoars. A 41-year-old man with a history of diabetes mellitus was admitted with lower abdominal pain and vomiting. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy revealed three huge, round diospyrobezoars in the stomach. He was made to drink two cans of Coca-Cola every 6 h. At endoscopy the next day, the bezoars were partially dissolved and turned to be softened. We performed direct endoscopic injection of Coca-Cola into each bezoar. At repeated endoscopy the next day, the bezoars were completely dissolved.
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PMID:Huge gastric diospyrobezoars successfully treated by oral intake and endoscopic injection of Coca-Cola. 1633 Feb 68


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