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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The hemolytic-uremic syndrome consists of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, acute renal failure, and thrombocytopenia following a prodromal illness of gastroenteritis or upper respiratory infection. The syndrome can present in dramatic fashion with severe
abdominal pain
and signs of peritonitis suggesting an acute surgical crisis. In a series of 25 patients, 40% had
abdominal pain
, 25% had abdominal tenderness, and 20% had peritoneal signs. Clues to diagnosis in the early stages of the acute illness were mild to moderate hypertension, abnormal peripheral blood smear, anemia despite dehydration, and proteinuria. Significant
abdominal pain
and x-ray evidence of colitis may occur before development of typical laboratory findings, and these were evident in at least one case. Three patients underwent laparotomy for suspected bowel perforation.
Colitis
without perforation was found in all cases. In the absence of documented perforation, toxic megacolon, or intussusception, the decision to perform laparotomy in patients with hemolytic-uremic syndrome who have signs of peritonitis must be individualized. Failure to recognize the underlying renal problem can lead to serious errors in fluid and electrolyte management and delay of appropriate therapy.
...
PMID:Hemolytic-uremic syndrome: a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma for the surgeon. 73 58
The medical records of all patients ages 0 to 21 years who underwent proctosigmoidoscopy and/or rectal biopsy over a 27 month period of time were reviewed to determine the efficacy and safety of these procedures in pediatric patients. One hundred twenty-one patients underwent proctosigmoidoscopy; 91 of these also had rectal biopsies. Median age was two years; 21% were less than six months and 8% less than one month of age. Depth of examination was 10 to 15 cm in most patients greater than 10 years of age. Induced friability was the most frequently observed mucosal abnormality. Abnormal findings were almost always present in patients with bloody diarrhea and were quite common in those with rectal bleeding, but less common in those with chronic diarrhea and
abdominal pain
.
Colitis
of various causes was the most common cause of blood in the stool; anal fissures were found in only four of 23 patients with rectal bleeding. Both proctosigmoidoscopy and rectal biopsy were needed to exclude the presence of colitis. Mobidity was 0% with proctosigmoidoscopy and 0.34% with rectal suction biopsy.
...
PMID:Proctosigmoidoscopy and rectal biopsy in infants and children. 108 95
This paper reviews our five years' clinical experience (1987 to 1991) of 22 patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). There were 12 patients with Crohn's disease and 10 patients with ulcerative colitis. The mean age at diagnosis was 8.7 years (2 to 14 years). Clinical impressions before referral were chronic diarrhea in 11, irritable bowel syndrome in 5, colon polyp in 4, lymphoma in 3, intestinal tuberculosis in 2, amoebic colitis in 2, ulcerative colitis in 2 children and other diseases. The mean interval from the onset of symptoms to the diagnosis of IBD was 18 months. Diagnosis of Crohn's disease was delayed for more than 13 months in 8 (67%), whereas that of ulcerative colitis was delayed for more than 13 months in 4 (40%). Diarrhea (50%),
abdominal pain
(36%) and rectal bleeding (36%) were the three most frequent presenting complaints of IBD. Moderately severe
abdominal pain
was a more common chief complaint in Crohn's disease (58%) than in ulcerative colitis (10%). Hematochezia (90% vs 17%) and moderately severe diarrhea (90% vs 75%) were more common gastrointestinal manifestations in ulcerative colitis than in Crohn's disease. The associated extraintestinal manifestations were oral ulcer in 7, arthralgia in 11 and arthritis in 4, skin lesions in 2, eye lesions in 2 and growth failure in 9 patients. Of 12 children with Crohn's disease, granuloma was found in 5, aphthous ulcerations in 8, cobble stone appearance in 8, skip area or asymmetric lesions in 6, transmural involvement in 7, and perianal fistula in 3. Among 10 children with ulcerative
Colitis
, there were crypt abscess in 8, granularity or friability in 10 and rectosigmoid ulcerations with purulent exudate in 8 children. The main sites of involvement in children with Crohn's disease were both the small and large bowels in 7 (58%), small bowel only in 2 (16%), and colon only in 3 (25%). Terminal ileum involvement was seen in 75% of Crohn's disease cases. The main sites of involvement in children with ulcerative colitis were total colon in 4 (40%), up to the splenic flexure in 2 (20%), rectosigmoid in 3 (30%) and rectum only in one (10%). Medical treatment including sulfasalazine, and systemic or topical steroid was administered initially in most patients. Seven of 12 patients with Crohn's disease and 2 of 10 patients with ulcerative colitis were operated on.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Inflammatory bowel disease in children--clinical, endoscopic, radiologic and histopathologic investigation. 128 21
Of 6,099 children treated for malignancy, 16 (ages 3.5 to 18 years) developed acute appendicitis between 1962 and 1989. Fourteen had leukemia (ALL 10, AML 4). One each had rhabdomyosarcoma and Ewing's sarcoma. Active malignancy at diagnosis was noted in 10, 4 of whom had severe neutropenia (absolute neutrophil count less than 500/mm3). Of all the leukemics (2,794/6,099),
abdominal pain
during induction was a frequent complaint. The incidence of appendicitis, however, was low (0.5%). Nine of the 16 patients presented classically, facilitating prompt diagnosis and treatment. Six diagnoses were delayed. Three of these patients presented atypically with vague, nonlocalized pain, abdominal distention, lack of abdominal guarding, fever, dehydration, diarrhea, and unusual symptoms such as upper gastrointestinal bleeding. In each of these 6 patients the appendix was ruptured. Delays led to complications and deaths. Three patients required perioperative transfusions to treat excessive bleeding and two patients with ruptured appendicitis developed wound abscesses. Two patients died; in one, ruptured appendix was diagnosed only at autopsy. The other patient died of uncontrolled sepsis.
Typhlitis
occurring during induction chemotherapy may present similarly and is the main differential diagnosis.
Typhlitis
will usually improve with medical treatment alone. Nausea and vomiting (13/16), right lower quadrant pain (13/16), guarding (14/16), tachycardia (12/16), fever (10/16), and rebound tenderness (10/16) were the most frequent signs and symptoms of appendicitis. Persistent localized abdominal pain and guarding, lack of improvement with medical treatment, clinical deterioration, and the development of a mass were our indications for laparotomy. Despite major improvements in therapy, there is still a 37.5% error rate in our ability to accurately diagnose appendicitis in pediatric cancer patients.
...
PMID:Acute appendicitis in children with leukemia and other malignancies: still a diagnostic dilemma. 152 62
Recurrent
abdominal pain
in childhood can be caused structurally, functionally, metabolically or psychosomatically. In the neonatal period there occur malformations, in infancy chronic inflammations of bowel as well as obstructions due to adhesions following laparotomies or chronic intussusceptions or volvulus. In pre-school and school-age symptoms of appendicitis, lymphadenitis, Crohn's disease or
Colitis
ulcerosa occur. But every 8th to 9th child of school-age suffers from functional
abdominal pain
without structural origin, probably caused by an "irritable colon".
...
PMID:[Chronic abdominal pain in childhood]. 375 Oct 69
Sixty-five patients were treated with oral vancomycin for Clostridium difficile colitis associated with treatment of infection by antibiotics.
Colitis
was confirmed by endoscopy in patients with diarrhoea and positive tests on diarrhoeal stools for Cl. difficile and/or its cytotoxin or, if endoscopy could not be performed, by the presence of fever and peripheral or faecal leucocytosis. Vancomycin dosage ranged from 125 to 500 mg four times daily for an average of about ten days. The mean duration of diarrhoea after starting therapy was four days;
abdominal pain
and fever usually resolved in two or three days. Post-treatment carriage of Cl. difficile was common. Eighteen per cent of patients developed a recurrence of colitis after treatment was discontinued, but responded to treatment with oral vancomycin, metronidazole, or bacitracin. After comparison of our results with those reported by others we concluded that vancomycin remains the treatment of choice for patients who are acutely and severely ill with Cl. difficile.
...
PMID:Treatment of antibiotic-associated colitis with vancomycin. 652 70
Seventy two patients admitted to a medical department with dyspepsia but without a previous diagnosis of peptic ulcer disease or chronic pancreatitis were studied consecutively. A pancreatic function test (Lundh meal test) and an upper endoscopy was made in all patients. There was no difference in age, sex ratio, occurrence of upper
abdominal pain
or chronic alcoholism between the groups of patients with reduced pancreatic function (20) and the group with normal function (52). Seven duodenal ulcers were found, two in patients with normal pancreatic function (2/52 = 3.8%; 95% conf lim: 0.5-13.2) and five in patients with reduced pancreatic function (5/20 = 25%; 95% conf lim: 8.7-49.1). This difference was statistically significant (p less than 0.01).
Duodenitis
occurred with equal frequency in the two groups.
...
PMID:Association between duodenal bulb ulceration and reduced exocrine pancreatic function. 688 16
Colitis
is an important cause of
abdominal pain
and diarrhoea and is the main cause of blood and mucus in the stool. The inflammation can be due to infectious or to non-infectious causes, most commonly ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. However, a wide variety of rarer causes of colitis also present in childhood. These include colitis or enterocolitis secondary to Hirschsprung's disease and metabolic disorders (which include Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome, glycogen storage disease type 1b and pellagra). Primary inflammation of the colon is seen in microscopic and collagenous colitis, ulcerating enterocolitis of infancy, allergic colitis and autoimmune enteropathy. The histological pattern of each of these diseases has a characteristic picture and separates them from each other from ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. The pathophysiology of these rare forms of colitis in childhood is not clear; but in the future they may give us an insight into the pathogenesis of large bowel inflammation, particularly when the colitis occurs secondary to an established disease.
...
PMID:Unusual colitides. 800 42
We identified 24 children treated for malignancies between 1962 and 1992 who had antemortem diagnoses of typhlitis that were confirmed on review. The study criteria specified the presence of fever,
abdominal pain
, and tenderness, with radiological evidence of right-sided colonic inflammation.
Typhlitis
was most frequent in patients treated for acute leukemias. Computed tomography and ultrasonography were more sensitive than plain radiography (false-negative rates, 15%, 23%, and 48%, respectively). The wider availability of these sensitive procedures and the increased intensity of chemotherapeutic regimens may account for a marked increase in the incidence of typhlitis over the past 5 years. Most patients responded to aggressive medical management, and typhlitis was fatal in only two cases (1 of 21 cases managed medically and 1 of 3 taken to surgery). Seven patients are alive > 1 year following the diagnosis. These findings contrast with prior descriptions of typhlitis as a preterminal event. Computed tomography and/or ultrasonography should be performed in all neutropenic patients with right-lower-quadrant signs to permit prompt diagnosis and treatment.
...
PMID:Typhlitis in children with cancer: a 30-year experience. 821 94
Typhlitis
is a necrotizing inflammation of the cecum usually found in acute leukemia patients on chemotherapy in the setting of agranulocytosis. We describe five cases of typhlitis, characterized by fever,
abdominal pain
, abdominal tenderness and watery diarrhea, occurring during periods of neutropenia. In 4 cases, sonography showed thickening of the cecum wall. Ultrasound appears to offer an easy noninvasive method of diagnosing this potential lethal disease. Four patients were treated successfully with broad-spectrum antibiotics and bowel rest. There was 1 death resulting from septic complication.
...
PMID:Typhlitis in acute childhood leukemia. 875 77
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