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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of insulin treatment in acute pancreatitis was studied in a double-blind investigation. Fifteen patients with clinical signs of acute pancreatitis were treated with intravenous infusion of glucose and insulin only. Twelve patients were free from
pain
within four hours of commencement of treatment. Within eight hours all fifteen were free from
abdominal pain
. Fourteen patients with pancreatitis established by the same criteria were treated with glucose infusions without insulin. Only four of the patients in this group became free from
pain
within four hours. The role of intravenously infused insulin with respect to the more beneficial effect in the first group is discussed.
...
PMID:Role of intravenously infused insulin in treatment of acute pancreatitis. A double-blind study. 109 32
Patients with functional bowel disease commonly complain of
abdominal pain
, bloating, and excessive flatulence and eructation.
Pain
and bloating may be primarily caused by abnormal intestinal motility rather than by excessive intestinal gas. As yet there are no data available that prove excessive flatulence is actually caused by the presence of excessive intestinal gas. A study of the composition of intestinal gas provides insight into whether it is derived from swallowed air or from intraluminal metabolism. Therapy aims primarily at excluding the presence of organic disease as a cause and reassuring the patient that the disorder is functional in nature. Dietary manipulation, changing the habit of aerophagia, exercise, and pressure and heat applied to be abdominal area are all possibilities to be tried.
...
PMID:Intestinal gas. 110 99
Inguinal hernioplasty was performed in a series of 14 female patients with occult inguinal hernias over a period of five years. During this time 194 herniorrhaphies were performed and thus the incidence of repair for occult hernia was 8%. These patients represent a definite syndrome which has not been sufficiently documented in the surgical literature. The condition is defined and the anatomic pathology documented photographically. The mean age in this series was 20 years with a range of 15-45 years. Thirteen of the 14 cases were followed a mean of 10 months postoperatively. Ten of these were considered excellent results and were symptom-free. The remaining three cases were judged as good results but objective evaluation was less conclusive. There have been no recurrences. The anatomic basis for this syndrome has been documented by others. The absence of an impulse on clinical examination is explained on the basis of size of the hernias and the difference in the anatomy between males and females. Occult inguinal hernia in the female is clinically recognizable on the basis of intermittency, character, and localization of
pain
and after the exclusion of other pathologic conditions. This syndrome should be entertained in the differential diagnosis of lower
abdominal pain
in the female. Hernioplasty is safe and effective therapy and returns the patient to normal activity.
...
PMID:Occult inguinal hernia in the female. 113 Aug 68
A case of
abdominal pain
caused by irritation of a segment of jejunum and another due to irritation of the ureter are reported. In both cases the cause of the irritation was established to be osteophytic growth from the 4th lumbar vertebra. After its excision the symptoms disappeared in both cases. To the best of our knowledge, osteophytes have not been reported before to be the cause of intestinal and ureteric
pain
, and its is therefore urged that in cases of intractable
pain
these must be considered as a possible cause.
...
PMID:Intra-abdominal symptoms arising from spinal osteophytes. 113 12
A washout technic with intestinal infusion of an inert gas mixture was used to study the relation of gas to functional abdominal symptoms. The volume of gas in the intestinal tract (176 plus or minus 28 ml S.E.M.) of 12 fasting patients with chronic complaints of excess gas did not differ significantly (P greater than 0.10) from that of 10 controls (199 plus or minus 31 ml). Similarly, there was no difference in the composition or accumulation rate of intestinal gas. However, more gas tended to reflux back into the stomach in patients who complained of
abdominal pain
during infusion of volumes of gas well tolerated by controls. Six patients with severe
pain
during the study had intestinal transit times of gas (40 plus or minus 6 minutes S.E.M.) that were significantly (P less than 0.05) longer than those of the control group (22 plus or minus 3 minutes). Thus, complaints of bloating,
pain
and gas may result from disordered intestinal motility in combination with an abnormal
pain
response to gut distention rather than from increased volumes of gas.
...
PMID:The role of intestinal gas in functional abdominal pain. 115 77
Case reports of 2 patients who developed pancreatitis and hyperlipidemia while using oral contraceptives are presented. The 1st patient had been taking Ovulen for 2 years when severe
abdominal pain
suddenly developed. Initially cholecystitis was diagnosed. Symptoms subsided within 1 week but recurred 2 months later, when the white blood count was increased to 16,400/cubic mm. Serum was grossly lipemic with a triglyceride level of 3500 mg% and serum cholesterol 560 mg%. 3 days later triglycerides had fallen to 400 mg% and cholesterol to 270 mg%. Cholecystography was normal. The
pain
had subsided. Symptoms have not recurred since stopping use of Ovulen. The 2nd patient was admitted with severe
abdominal pain
of 48 hours duration. Similar attacks of
pain
had occurred previously but had been of short duration. She had been taking Ovulen for 3 years. White blood count was increased to 18,000. Serum was grossly lipemic. Serum glyceride concentration was 7000 mg% and cholesterol 1200 mg%. Afer 3 days triglycerides were 500 mg% and cholesterol 475 mg%. Pancreatitis was diagnosed. Therapy was Ryles tube suction, atropine, intravenous saline, and a broad spectrum antibiotic. Symptoms subsided in 10 days. The hyperlipidemia is thought to have been a primary condition causing the pancreatitis. [Patients known to have such a condition should avoid use of oral contraceptives.
...
PMID:Hyperlipidaemia and pancreatitis associated with oral contraceptive therapy. 118 40
From 1965 to 1973, 7 patients with severe chronic mesenteric vascular insufficiency have been successfully operated upon.
Abdominal pain
, weight loss and epigastric murmur were the most significant symptoms and signs in these diffusely atheromatous patients. Aortography with exposure in the lateral projection was essential for diagnosis and operative planning. Although two and often all three main splanchnic arteries were involved, revasculariztion of only the superior mesenteric artery restored normal hemodynamics. There was no operative mortality. Weight gain was dramatic and post-prandial
pain
disappeared in all patients. One patient diedone year and one half after the operation from an acute cerebro-vascular accidnet. Our surgical experience in this field, although small, is very gratifying and rewarding.
...
PMID:Revascularization of the superior mesenteric artery. 119 39
197 consecutive, non-acute, medical patients who presented with upper
abdominal pain
were subjected to a standard programme of investigation. The investigation represents an attempt to supplement general clinical experience with exact data. In about half the patients no cause of the
pain
was found and a diagnosis of X-ray negative dyspepsia was made by elimination. It is concluded that a special research effort is needed to explain the complaint in this large group of patients. Duodenal ulcer was twice as common as gastric ulcer, and two patients suffered from gastric cancer. The diagnostic value of the symptomatology was analysed, but only the relation of
pain
to meals was found to be of diagnostic interest. In particular, the probability of duodenal ulcer was low and that of X-ray negative dyspepsia high, if the
pain
was provoked by eating. The age, sex, and acid production also had diagnostic value.
...
PMID:A diagnostic study of patients with upper abdominal pain. 120 11
It is the experience of the urological author that radiculitis secondary to costovertebral joint derangement is the most common cause of lower
abdominal pain
. However, this
pain
is sometimes made worse when the patient is subjected to a flank incision for presumed renal disease, since the aftermath of a flank incision may be a downward pull on a rib owing to detachments of muscles attached to its superior surface. Emotional problems, too, befall many patients with radiculitis-despondency over delayed diagnoses or sensitivity at having been told their complaints are psychosomatic. Most often theses difficulties disappear spontaneously once the
pain
is relived. Definitive diagnosis requires orthopedic techniques. Unfortunately, few orthopedists are well versed or interested in the syndrome of renal pain. When they are, erroneous diagnosis can be corrected and a course of conservative or surgical treatment prescribed, with excellent results.
...
PMID:Radiculitis distress as a mimic of renal pain. 123 99
In the two years - 1st January, 1973 to 31st December, 1974 - 533 patients had operation for tubal pregnancy at the Gynaecology Unit of the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital. About five cases per week were seen during this period. The incidence was 44 for every thousand deliveries at the Hospital. The case notes of 404 of the 533 patients have been reviewed. The age range was 15 to 44 years; 78% were in the 21 to 35 years age group. 81.4% had had pregnancies which went beyond 28 weeks. Only 13.7% had never had an intrauterine pregnancy. Tubal pregnancy is therefore not a disease of the primarily infertile as is commonly thought. There was no significant difference between the incidence on the right side and the incidence on the left side. The ampulla was the commonest site of implantation in the tube (45%). Tubal rupture (89.6%) was commoner than tubal abortion (10.4%). The principal signs and symptoms were
abdominal pain
, amenorrhoea, abdominal tenderness, abdominal distension, and signs of free fluid in the abdomen, syncope, anomalous vaginal bleeding, pallor and vomiting. The absence of amenorrhoea does not rule out the possibility of an ectopic. On pelvic examination the major signs were tenderness in a fornix and cervical excitation
pain
. Abdominal paracentesis and culdocentesis if positive are useful in diagnosis; negative results prove nothing. Laparascopy is of great value and should be employed in the difficult case. Beware of the patient in the reproductive age with anomalous vaginal bleeding, vague abdominal pains, syncopic attacks and anaemia. The mortality rate in the series was 0.7%.
...
PMID:Tubal pregnancy: a review of 404 cases. 123 87
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