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

Urolithiasis is quite prevalent in Satpura belt of Central India. Forty five children with urolithiasis were studied in Jawahar Medical Foundations Hospital, Dhule, Maharashtra over a period of three years. The mean age was 7.1 +/- 3.2 (range 18 months-15 years). The chief presenting complaints were dysuria and lower abdominal pain. The physical, laboratory and radiographic findings were evaluated. Calculi were located in the bladder (80%), urethra (9%), kidney (6.6%) and ureter (4.4%). Calculi were mainly composed of calcium oxalate (65.7%) and calcium phosphate (34.3%). The predominant urinary tract stones in the tribal Satpura belt are bladder stones and may be related to poor nutrition, low socioeconomic status and consumption of bajra (millet) as staple food as found in this region (93.5%).
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PMID:Urolithiasis: a tribal scenario. 1079 52

The case of a 61 yo diabetic woman presenting with dysuria and lower abdominal pain is described. The incomplete resolution of the clinical picture after short antibiotic treatment and a strong suspect of autonomic neuropathy oriented to an anamnestic reevaluation that evidenced the presence of pneumaturia. The last was the key-symptom that guided to diagnostic imaging showing emphysematous cystitis while a gastroscopy confirmed the presence of autonomic neuropathy manifested by gastroparesis. Emphisematous cystitis is a characteristic infectious complication of diabetic patients induced by a persistent incomplete bladder emptying and bacterial glucose fermentation. The complete eradication of the infectious agent requires a long term antibiotic course and a prompt identification of this pathology.
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PMID:[A 61-year-old woman with abdominal pain and urination disorders]. 1095 55

A 69-year-old man visited our hospital with a complaint of dysuria. Intravenous excretory urography, ultrasonography and CT scan showed a tumor at the base of the bladder and the prostate. Transrectal needle biopsy revealed signet ring cell carcinoma. Radical cystectomy and ileal conduit were performed, and a histological diagnosis was a primary signet ring cell carcinoma of the bladder. No recurrence or metastasis was found either on ultrasonography or CT scan at 26 months after the operation. He suddenly suffered from severe abdominal pain, and died of hypovolemic shock by ileus as a late complication of an ileal conduit at 27 months after the operation. An ileus with extensive necrosis of small intestine and cancer recurrence at the junction of the ureter and ileal conduit were observed at autopsy.
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PMID:[A case of ileus as a late complication of an ileal conduit in a patient with primary signet ring cell carcinoma of the bladder]. 1119 3

Developmental cysts are the most common retrorectal cystic lesions in adults, occurring mostly in middle-aged women. They are classified as epidermoid cysts, dermoid cysts, enteric cysts (tailgut cysts and cystic rectal duplication), and neurenteric cysts according to their origin and histopathologic features. Although developmental cysts are often asymptomatic, patients may present with symptoms resulting from local mass effect (eg, constipation, rectal fullness, lower abdominal pain, dysuria), with a palpable retrorectal mass at digital rectal examination, or with a complication. Infection with fistulization, bleeding, and malignant degeneration are the major complications of developmental cysts. A well-defined, unilocular or multilocular, thin-walled cystic lesion is the main imaging feature. Uncommonly, a sacral bone defect and calcifications are associated with developmental cysts. The differential diagnosis includes cystic sacrococcygeal teratoma, anterior sacral meningocele, anal duct or gland cyst, necrotic rectal leiomyosarcoma, extraperitoneal adenomucinosis, cystic lymphangioma, pyogenic abscess, neurogenic cyst, and necrotic sacral chordoma. Complete surgical excision is indicated to establish the diagnosis and avoid complications.
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PMID:Retrorectal developmental cysts in adults: clinical and radiologic-histopathologic review, differential diagnosis, and treatment. 1135 7

A 70-year-old man with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus, and an elevated serum prostatic specific antigen, underwent transrectal prostate biopsy. He received one dose of cefotium before, and three doses of cefotium (1.0 gram every 12 hours intravenously) after prostatic biopsy. He was doing well until postbiopsy day 1, when he developed high fever, dysuria and lower abdominal pain. His perineal area exhibited black-purpish discoloration. On postbiopsy day 3, laboratory data showed leukopenia and DIC. Operative findings during laparotomy on the same day, included malodorous cloudy fluid and tissue edema involving the perivesical space. Intraoperative tissue cultures as well as postoperative cultures of blood and drainage revealed Escherichia coli, serotype O-6. Despite maximal supportive therapy, the patient developed multiorgan failure and died on the tenth postbiopsy day. This patient's history and hospitalization course suggests that transrectal prostatic biopsy induced Fournier's gangrene.
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PMID:[A case report of Fournier's gangrene in a diabetic patient induced by transrectal prostate biopsy (TRPB)]. 1217 43

Patients with sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in developing countries are often untreated for long periods of time or receive ineffective treatment, producing complications that can lead to infertility, blindness, and even death. In addition, there is growing research evidence that people with bacterial or viral STDs are more likely to acquire--and perhaps transmit--the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). STD control programs in developing countries must be reorganized to include: 1) good management of patients with STDs and their contacts, 2) case finding for syphilis in the antenatal population, 3) screenings and case findings for gonorrhea in high-risk groups, and 4) systematic prophylaxis for ophthalmia neonatorum in newborns. Since diagnosis before treatment is problematic in rural areas, the World Health Organization recommends simple treatment protocols based on the most common STD symptoms--urethral discharge; gynecological complaints such as vaginal discharge, low abdominal pain, or dysuria; genital ulceration; and inguinal bubo, a swelling of the lymph nodes in the groin. Other components of this approach include standardized treatment, contact tracing and treatment, health education targeted at high-risk groups, follow-up and case referral where necessary, and the collection of simple statistics on treatment efficacy and STD epidemiology. The incidence of STDs in developing countries is steadily increasing as a result of urbanization, increased numbers of young people, and delayed age at marriage. However, this situation can be combatted through application of treatment protocols, technological advances, improvements in the health care delivery system, and awareness on the part of policy makers of the seriousness of the STD problem.
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PMID:Management of sexually transmitted diseases. 1234 18

In patients with systemic lupus erythematosus(SLE), interstitial cystitis(lupus cystitis) is an uncommon, but important manifestation. We report two Japanese patients with lupus cystitis. Case 1 was a 49-year-old woman diagnosed as having rheumatoid arthritis and membranous nephropathy. She was treated with prednisolone(5 mg daily). Case 2 was a 41-year-old woman also diagnosed as having rheumatoid arthritis previously and treated with a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Both cases presented abdominal pain, vomiting, dysuria and frequency of micturition. We diagnosed these cases as SLE on the basis of arthritis, renal disorder(proteinuria and hematuria), and positive antinuclear and anti-dsDNA antibodies. In addition, bilateral hydronephrosis was found in both cases. Thus, they were also diagnosed as probable lupus cystitis. The patients were treated with one cycle of methylprednisolone pulse therapy. Thereafter they were treated with 60 mg/day of prednisolone and their symptoms resolved promptly. Furthermore, no abnormal finding was found by abdominal ultrasonography and/or the intravenous pyelogram after therapy. Renal biopsies were performed and both cases showed lupus glomerulopathy (case 1: WHO class Vb, case II: WHO class IVb). Abdominal pain and/or dysuria, which is common in SLE patients, requires further examinations to evaluate the lupus cystitis.
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PMID:[Two cases of lupus cystitis complicated by lupus nephritis treated successfully with steroid therapy]. 1473 94

Acute appendicitis and blunt abdominal trauma are common surgical emergencies. Whether there is a causative relationship between these two entities has long been a subject of debate. A twenty-one-year-old male Japanese tourist presented with vague abdominal pain and dysuria that began after he had been beaten and robbed. No signs of trauma were detected on physical examination; however, there were diffuse abdominal sensitivity with maximal tenderness in the hypogastrium and rebound tenderness in the right lower quadrant. Upon no improvement with medications within 24 hours, laparotomy was performed, which revealed an inflamed appendix, a few enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes, and free peritoneal fluid that was found to be sterile. Following appendectomy, the diagnosis was confirmed by pathologic examination and the enlargement of the lymph node was attributed to non-specific reactive hyperplasia. The patient had an uneventful postoperative course, with relief of pain and fever.
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PMID:A case of blunt abdominal trauma and posttraumatic acute appendicitis. 1475 90

We report on a rare case of cystitis glandularis complicating an eosinophilic cystitis in an adult. Complaints at presentation included dysuria, haematuria and abdominal pain. Ultrasound and cystoscopy suggested a bladder tumor. Histological analysis of bladder biopsy showed the typical findings of cystitis glandularis associated with eosinophilic cystitis. The patient was treated with transurethral resection of the lesion and a combination of corticosteroids and anthistaminics for three months. He is disease-free at 24 months of follow-up.
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PMID:Cystitis glanduralis complicating an eosinophilic cystitis: a case report. 1475 34

When a renal recipient in Turkey develops a postoperative problem, consultation by the transplant team in the emergency unit is often the first step toward a solution. The main aim of this study was to identify the types of postoperative problems that cause renal transplantation patients to visit the emergency room. Gathering this information was believed to be an important step toward developing new management strategies for these problems, in line with the quality management systems used throughout our hospital network. We collated the physical signs in the 78 patients when they presented to the emergency room. The most common one was fever (26.9%) followed by nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, dyspnea, skin lesions, headache, musculoskeletal trauma, hematuria/dysuria, epistaxis, psychological disorders, angina pectoris, hypertension, epilepsy, and rectal bleeding. Among the 78 patients, 45 (57.7%) were hospitalized and 33 (42.3%) were discharged with medical advice or drug treatment. Among the 45 hospitalized patients, 97.8% were initiated on medical treatment. Knowing the surgical and medical emergency issues prevalent in recipients enables the development of new procedures and algorithms, leading to more effective management and follow-up of renal transplant recipients.
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PMID:Problems in postoperative renal transplant recipients who present to the emergency unit: experience at one center. 1501 41


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