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)

In the last nine years we have operated upon six children (eight males and two females) with primary omental pathology. The age of our patients ranged from five to eleven years with the exception of a newborn prenatally diagnosed of lymphangioma. All the remaining children had abdominal pain and right iliac tenderness for an average of two days. All had leukocytosis and left shift. Vomiting and fever were present only in one instance. In no case the mass was palpated preoperatively. The initial diagnosis was acute appendicitis in all cases. A patient suffered, one year after operation, a second acute clinical picture and the omental mass could be revealed [correction of decealed] preoperatively. At operation there was free intraperitoneal fluid in six instances (three times bloody, two times clear and one purulent). Surgical findings (nine operations) were: three omental segmental infarctions (primary in two cases and secondary to torsion in one), three segmental epiploitis in two patients (one acute, one chronic, one secondary to foreign body), two cystic lesions (one lymphangioma, one hydatic cyst) and one benign tumor (fibromatosis).
...
PMID:[Primary surgical pathology of the epiploon]. 209 40

Infarction of an appendix epiploica is a rare event that is seldom diagnosed preoperatively. Report herein is a case of a 76-year-old male complaining of abdominal pain. The etiology of this pain was unclear but the diagnosis of epiploitis was preoperatively suspected. The infarcted epiploic appendix was identified and resected laparoscopically.
...
PMID:Endoscopic removal of an infarcted appendix epiploica. 851 68

A 5-year-old boy admitted with localized lower abdominal pain and tenderness simulating acute appendicitis underwent surgery, and primary omentitis without appendicitis or other cause of an acute abdomen was diagnosed. The absence of other concomitant signs and symptoms of acute abdomen was remarkable. This is the first case of primary omentitis as a cause of acute abdomen in the English-language literature.
...
PMID:Primary omentitis as a cause of acute abdomen. 1099 1