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

Over a ten year period, four patients with inflammation or perforation of non-Meckelian, small intestinal diverticula were treated on the surgical services of Bellevue Hospital. This entity remains uncommon but may be increasing in incidence. The patients presented with a short history of severe abdominal pain, usually accompanied by nausea and vomiting. Each patient also gave a longer preceding history of less well defined abdominal symptoms. The pathogenesis of the small intestinal diverticula is uncertain but may be related to disturbed muscular peristalsis in the small bowel analogous to the changes implicated in esophageal and colonic diverticular disease. The diverticulum may be difficult to demonstrate at operation, and careful exploration for this possibility should be carried out at the time of operation for peritonitis of obscure origin. Segmental resection and end-to-end anastomosis is the treatment of choice.
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PMID:Perforated diverticula of the jejunum and lleum. 82 70

A retrospective study of 71 patients who had a colonic resection for diverticular disease at one hospital during a 7-year period was undertaken. Patients were divided into those undergoing surgery for complications of diverticular disease (49) and those in whom abdominal pain and an altered bowel habit were attributed to the presence of diverticular disease in the absence of any detectable complication (22). In both groups major complications occurred after operation. The incidence of complications was greater when surgery was undertaken in stages to effect colonic resection and restoration of intestinal continuity. Symptoms were more often cured or relieved in those patients undergoing surgery for complicated diverticular disease than in those with 'uncomplicated' disease. These poor results may be due to incorrectly attributing symptoms to diverticula which happened to be present.
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PMID:Results of colectomy for diverticular disease of the colon. 87 16

Alimentary tract manifestations were found in all of 17 patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia, type 2b. The manifestations are important because (1) they were chronic, (2) they were severe and led to abdominal operation in 5 patients, (3) they antedated detection of the endocrine neoplasms in the syndrome in 16 patients (94%), and (4) they provided clinical clues that stimulated search for thyroidal C-cell and adrenal medullary disease in 6 patients. The alimentary tract manifestations were diverse: symptoms included constipation, diarrhea, difficulty with feeding, projectile vomiting, crampy abdominal pain, and loud borborygmi; findings included thickened lips, nodules on the anterior third of the tongue, abdominal distention, visible peristaltic waves, and roentgenographic evidence of megacolon or diverticulosis of the colon or of dilatation of the small intestine and stomach. Initial misinterpretation or failure to realize the significance of one or more of these alimentary tract manifestations led to suspicion of aganglionic megacolon (three patients), malabsorption syndrome (two patients), and tracheal ring (one patient).
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PMID:Alimentary tract manifestations of multiple endocrine neoplasia, type 2b. 89 96

A patient over 40 years of age who complains of lower abdominal pain, constipation or diarrhea or both, and increased flatulence should be suspected of having diverticulosis. When pain becomes more severe and persistent, diverticulitis must be considered. Diagnosis depends on roentgen demonstration of the presence of diverticula. Sigmoidoscopy and barium enema study are essential to exclude coexisting disease but in diverticulitis may need to be postponed until severe local and systemic signs of inflammation have subsided. A number of diseases can simulate diverticulitis, and differential diagnosis may present considerable difficulty. Irritable colon syndrome and acute appendicitis may be indistinguishable clinically from diverticulitis. Differentiation from carcinoma is usually not difficult, but exclusion of coexistent carcinoma may be impossible except by resection. Ulcerative colitis is also easily distinguished except when, rarely, it coexists. Crohn's disease of the colon is less easily differentiated, especially in patients over 40, in whom the two diseases often coexist. Other colonic diseases, such as ischemic colitis, and pelvic inflammatory diseases usually show characteristic features which make them readily distinguishable from diverticulitis.
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PMID:Diagnosis and differential diagnosis of colonic diverticulitis. 103 35

Diverticular disease comprises a spectrum of illness beginning with the irritable bowel syndrome and progressing to the life-threatening complications of diverticulitis and hemorrhage. Step-wise progression of this disease may be seen but is not invariably present; many patients with diverticulosis do not have preceding symptoms of the irritable bowel syndrome. The typical complaints of irregularity of bowel habits and abdominal pain will usually respond to the relatively new treatment modality of a high fiber diet with added wheat bran. Barium enema x-ray examination remains the primary diagnostic modality in the investigation of diverticular disease, and colonoscopy should be used only in the presence of certain specific circumstances. Surgery, aimed at the treatment of complications of this disease, has progressed to the point where one-stage extirpation of the diseased bowel is recommended.
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PMID:Diverticular disease. 108 3

This paper presents in detail the symptomatology and findings on examination of 642 patients suffering from a variety of lower gastrointestinal disorders, such as colonic and rectal cancer, diverticular disease, Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis. Location of precise sites of abdominal pain and tenderness was shown to carry a high level of diagnostic discrimination between the various disorders. Some surprising features emerged: almost half of patients with lower gastrointestinal tract disease complained of symptoms referable to the upper gastrointestinal tract, such as nausea/vomiting or anorexia. It is suggested that the provision on demand of such data to junior staff may benefit both diagnostic ability and decision making. As an incidental finding, just under 40% of patients with large bowel cancer had undergone previous (unrelated) abdominal surgery. The significance of this is unclear.
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PMID:Clinical presentation of diseases of the large bowel. A detailed study of 642 patients. 124 82

The value of a high-fiber diet in preventing and treating colonic diverticula is firmly established. Although the diagnosis of diverticulosis is usually made with colonoscopy or barium enema examination, computed tomography has become the test of choice during acute diverticulitis, when the diagnosis cannot be confidently made clinically. Recently developed surgical principles for diverticulitis include radiographically directed drainage with delayed operation for peridiverticular abscess, resection of the site of disease in patients with general peritonitis, and primary anastomosis in most cases requiring urgent intervention. Diverticulosis accompanied by abdominal pain or irregular bowel habits is by itself rarely an indication for surgery. Diverticular bleeding usually resolves spontaneously, but persistent bleeding can usually be successfully treated with segmental colectomy after localization of the bleeding site with colonoscopy or arteriography.
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PMID:Colonic diverticula. When complications require surgery and when they don't. 133 12

The effect of ispaghula husk on colonic motility of the right and left side was examined in 10 patients with left sided diverticular disease using an untethered pressure sensitive radiotelemetry capsule. After treatment, ispaghula husk reduced mouth to rectum transit by a median of 8.8 hours and the time to midtransverse colon by five hours. In the right colon there was an increase in the median percentage activity of 7% and the median number of pressure waves greater than 5 mm Hg/hour rose by 35.3. Motility changes in the left colon were less pronounced. Five of the seven patients with abdominal pain and six of the nine patients with altered bowel habit responded to treatment. These results suggest that it is ispaghula husk's action on the right unaffected colon which alleviates the symptoms of left sided diverticular disease.
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PMID:Does ispaghula husk stimulate the entire colon in diverticular disease? 156 54

We present a case of bladder transitional cell carcinoma with sigmoidovesical fistula due to diverticulitis. The patient was a 65-year-old male who had been suffering from recurrent abdominal pain with high fever for the past 6 months. He noticed pneumaturia and cloudy urine several times. He visited a doctor complaining of macroscopic hematuria and high fever, and was treated under the diagnosis of acute prostatitis. In our University Hospital cystoscopy showed a papillary bladder tumor. Pathological study of the tumor revealed transitional cell carcinoma, grade II, noninvasive type. Multiple diverticulosis of sigmoid colon was identified with barium enema examination. We performed transurethral resection of the bladder tumor. Three weeks later, the sigmoidovesical fistula was treated by primary resection of the sigmoid colon and wedge resection of the bladder including fistula.
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PMID:[A case of bladder transitional cell carcinoma with sigmoidovesical fistula due to diverticulitis]. 195 37

Colonic motility study was performed on a total of 145 patients. Of these, 55 were patients with symptomatic complicated diverticular disease, 30 had symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease, 30 had asymptomatic diverticular disease, and 30 were controls. The pressure sensors were positioned in the descending and the true sigmoid colon. Colonic motility index was significantly higher in symptomatic rather than in asymptomatic diverticular disease in the resting (P less than 0.001) and postprandial (P less than 0.001) states. This confirmed the association between symptomatic diverticular disease and high intraluminal pressure. The patients of the subgroup--complicated diverticular disease--were relatively young (mean age: 51.1 +/- 2.02 years) and had a short history of abdominal pain (18-36 months) and a short segment of colon with diverticula (cm 7.25 +/- 1.31). Our observations suggest that patients showing these indicators are at risk for major complication.
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PMID:Usefulness of colonic motility study in identifying patients at risk for complicated diverticular disease. 200 52


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