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

This pilot study was designed to investigate the relationship between perceived stress, self-esteem and "functional" pain in young adolescents with and without chronic disease. Twenty children with chronic disease and 15 without who were seen in a pediatric outpatient clinic completed a symptom survey, the Piers-Harris Self-Concept Survey, and Lewis's Feel-Bad Scale. Adolescents with significant self-reported complaints of abdominal pain, chest pain, and headaches (without documented organic cause) scored higher on the Feel-Bad scale (p less than 0.002) and lower on the self-concept scale (p less than 0.02) than those without functional complaints. Patients with chronic disease scored higher on the self-esteem measure (61 +/- 14 versus 48 +/- 14, p less than 0.01) and lower on the stress measure (80 +/- 40 versus 120 +/- 54, p less than 0.02) than those without a chronic disease. These findings of lower stress and higher self-esteem in adolescents with chronic illness were unexpected. Possible explanations are discussed.
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PMID:Self-esteem and perceived stress in young adolescents with chronic disease. Unexpected findings. 370 Jan 94

We analyzed clinical data from 195 patients (141 boys) with myocardial infarction complicating Kawasaki disease, collected from 74 major hospitals in Japan. The myocardial infarction usually occurred within the first year of illness, but 27.2% of the patients had myocardial infarction more than 1 year later. In 63% of the patients it occurred during sleep or at rest. The main symptoms of acute myocardial infarction were shock, unrest, vomiting, abdominal pain, and chest pain; chest pain was much more frequently recognized in the survivors and in older patients. The myocardial infarctions were asymptomatic in 37% of the patients. Twenty-two percent of the patients died during the first attack. Sixteen percent of the survivors of a first attack had a second attack. Forty-three percent of all survivors of the first or subsequent attack are doing well; however, others have some type of cardiac dysfunction, such as mitral regurgitation, decreased ejection fraction of the left ventricle, or left ventricular aneurysm. Coronary angiographic studies indicate that in most of the fatal cases there was obstruction either in the main left coronary artery or in both the main right coronary artery and the anterior descending artery. In survivors, one-vessel obstruction was frequently recognized, particularly in the right coronary artery.
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PMID:Myocardial infarction in Kawasaki disease: clinical analyses in 195 cases. 371 57

A syndrome of headache, fatigue, dizziness, paresthesias, chest pain, palpitations and visual disturbances was associated with chronic occult carbon monoxide exposure in 26 patients in a primary care setting. A causal association was supported by finding a source of carbon monoxide in a patient's home, workplace or vehicle; results of screening tests that ruled out other illnesses; an abnormally high carboxyhemoglobin level in 11 of 14 patients tested, and abatement or resolution of symptoms when the source of carbon monoxide was removed. Exposed household pets provided an important clue to the diagnosis in some cases. Recurrent occult carbon monoxide poisoning may be a frequently overlooked cause of persistent or recurrent headache, fatigue, dizziness, paresthesias, abdominal pain, diarrhea and unusual spells.
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PMID:Occult carbon monoxide poisoning. 382 10

Adolescent patients commonly experience symptoms such as headache, chest pain, abdominal pain, or dizziness that are psychophysiologic responses to stress, anxiety, and depression. Because most symptomatic adolescents initially visit medical providers, and not mental health professionals, the clinician is faced with the challenge of providing a comprehensive evaluation that is not merely focused on the symptom. In addition to a careful medical assessment, this evaluation must include a review of psychosocial functioning in the family, school, peer group, and community. Appropriate management may include supportive counseling, instruction in relaxation techniques, anti-depressant medication, and referral for psychotherapy.
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PMID:Evaluation and management of psychosomatic symptoms in adolescence. 394 55

The presentation, diagnosis and management of 14 cases of spontaneous transmural oesophageal rupture have been reviewed. Analysis suggested that the classical triad of vomiting, chest pain and subcutaneous emphysema was rare (1/14) and therefore misleading. Abdominal pain and tenderness obscured the clinical picture; the temporal relationship of pain to vomiting varied and subcutaneous emphysema was uncommon (4/14). Consequently, only two cases were correctly diagnosed on presentation and diagnosis in the others was markedly delayed (average 4 days). Contrast swallow examination, when eventually performed, was diagnostic. Twelve patients underwent repair: four under 24 h, who all survived and eight over 24 h, amongst whom there were one (12.5 per cent) operative and two (25 per cent) late deaths. Conservative management was successful in the remaining two cases. Oesophageal fistula, empyema and incorrect initial surgery were common and serious complications. Management options are reviewed and their relative merits considered.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of spontaneous transmural rupture of the oesophagus (Boerhaave's syndrome). 397 78

Records of 199 patients were analyzed retrospectively after upper gastrointestinal (UGI) series to assess its impact on patient management. Symptoms most predictive of an abnormal UGI series were dysphagia, UGI hemorrhage, abdominal pain, and chest pain. However, 23% of inpatients with seemingly trivial symptoms had shown abnormal results of the study. Overall sensitivity of the UGI series was 65%, which rose to 82% if esophagitis, gastritis, and abnormalities of the postoperative stomach were excluded. Effects on patient management included: serious pathologic change ruled out (53%), further studies ordered (21%), change of therapy (17%), existing therapy continued (16%), surgery performed (7%), and radiologic abnormality ignored (5%). In no case did the combination of initial screening by UGI series followed by endoscopy as indicated lead to subsequently reported morbidity or mortality due to a failure of diagnosis.
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PMID:Upper gastrointestinal series: patient management and a study of 199 cases. 402 44

Beginning clinical students cannot construct differential diagnoses the way more experienced students and physicians do because students lack knowledge and experience. Beginning students need a systematic framework for constructing a differential diagnosis. Such a framework can be developed using a two-dimensional grid, one axis being anatomic (referring to organs or structures), and the other listing types of disease (e.g., congenital, metabolic, infectious). Possible diagnoses that can explain major symptoms can then be fitted into the resulting grid. Examples are shown in this report for abdominal pain, chest pain, and edema. Such formulations may seem overly complete, but completeness is actually advantageous for students who are just starting to learn clinical medicine. Then, as they learn more about disease patterns and likelihood of occurrence, and elicit additional information from their patients, they can narrow and refine the diagnostic possibilities.
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PMID:Teaching differential diagnosis to beginning clinical students. 407 9

A two year combined retrospective and prospective study of 555 acute medical admissions to a district general hospital was carried out to assess the value of emergency biochemical, haematological, radiological, and electrocardiographic tests in diagnosis and treatment. For the study the tests were considered helpful only if they disclosed an abnormality and resulted in a definite diagnosis or change of treatment which would not have been possible from the history and examination alone. A total of 2372 emergency tests were carried out in the 555 patients who presented with 579 acute medical problems. Only 403 (17%) of the test results were abnormal and, of these, only one third helped in treatment and less than one third helped in diagnosis. The most useful diagnostic tests were serum amylase activity in abdominal pain, the electrocardiogram in chest pain, the chest radiograph in respiratory problems, and cerebrospinal fluid analysis in suspected meningitis or subarachnoid haemorrhage. The most useful tests in treatment were blood sugar value in diabetes, PCO2 in obstructive airways disease, and haemoglobin concentration in gastrointestinal haemorrhage. Of the tests requested by far the most often--blood urea and serum electrolyte concentrations--only 7% gave abnormal results and were rarely of any help in either diagnosis or treatment. Analysis of the reasons for the uncritical use of emergency tests by house officers suggested that better undergraduate training, regular audit by senior members of medical units, abolition of routine investigational procedures, and more selective laboratory reports would help to build up the house officer's confidence in his own skills of history taking and physical examination without recourse to indiscriminate use of laboratory and other investigations.
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PMID:Do emergency tests help in the management of acute medical admissions? 643 48

In prospectively evaluating 100 cases of adolescents with chest pain (along with two control groups), 91 were found to have recurrent chest pain; fewer than 5 had a serious organic cause. Significantly higher school absenteeism occurred in patients with either chest or abdominal pain than in patients without pain. Adolescents with chest and abdominal pain were more likely to be high users of medical services than those with no pain. Most adolescents believed that persons their age could have attacks; 44 of those with chest pain thought their symptom was due to a heart attack. The occurrence of chest pain was not influenced by an adolescent's age, sex, race, smoking status or family structure, nor was it consistently associated with depression. Chest pain is thus a common problem of adolescence that produces considerable functional impairment not attributable to serious underlying disease.
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PMID:Chest pain in adolescents--functional consequences. 650 73

The amount of primary care provided at hospitals is increasing, yet little information exists on the relative costs of this form of care. To address this issue, we compared the treatment resources used by internists practicing in hospital-based and free-standing clinics. The study site was the Kaiser-Permanente Medical Care Program, Oregon Region. To control for case mix, the analysis focused on episodes of six specified conditions; upper respiratory infection, urinary tract infection, hypertension, abdominal pain, chest pain, and physical exam. The California Relative Value Schedule was used to define care intensity by summarizing the clinical, laboratory, and radiology services provided. Results indicate that setting exerts little influence on the intensity of primary care for the episodes studied; care of similar intensity is provided in hospital-based and free-standing settings.
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PMID:Effects of hospital-based primary care setting on internists' treatment of primary care episodes. 679 28


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