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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The case records of 69 patients who had pancreatic pseudocysts were reviewed retrospectively. All patients had
abdominal pain
and tenderness, 38 had nausea and vomiting, 9 had
chills
and fever and 5 had jaundice. Forty-eight patients had elevated body temperatures and 26 had elevated leukocyte counts. A history of alcoholism was obtained in 48 patients. Ultrasonography demonstrated 54 pseudocysts near the body of the pancreas, 8 near the tail and 7 near the head. Thirty-nine patients had internal drainage, 16 had laparotomy and external drainage and 14 had percutaneous catheter drainage. One of these 14 patients died of uncontrollable sepsis. Six of the 39 patients who had internal drainage had clinical evidence of sepsis (4 had septic complications postoperatively, and 2 died); the remaining 33 patients who had noninfected pseudocysts left hospital within 20 days of operation. However, only four of nine patients who had percutaneous drainage for noninfected pseudocysts left hospital within 20 days of the procedure. Thus, the authors recommend that infected pancreatic pseudocysts be managed by percutaneous catheter drainage and noninfected pseudocysts by internal drainage.
...
PMID:Pancreatic pseudocysts: the role of percutaneous catheter drainage. 149 40
Primary appendicitis presenting in a hernia sac is uncommon. Diagnosis depends on a high index of suspicion. The authors present a case report of a 65-year-old male with a two-day history of a painful irreducible right inguinal mass; he denied
abdominal pain
, nausea, vomiting, fever, or
chills
.
...
PMID:Case report: acute appendicitis in an inguinal hernia. 157 5
Human blood monocytes (Mo) and monocyte-derived macrophages (M phi) are known to be potent antitumor cytotoxic effector cells through activation with recombinant human interferon gamma (rIFN-gamma), bacterial muramyldipeptide or the synthetic derivative muramyltripeptide phosphatidylethanolamine entrapped in liposomes (L-MTP-PE). Large-scale generation of ex vivo activated Mo from the blood of cancer patients proved feasible. We report our experience with a fixed rotor speed counterflow centrifugation elutration (CEE) procedure using the newly available Beckman high capacity JE-5.0 rotor system that reproducibly isolates up to 1.0-1.5 x 10(9) Mo with greater than 90% purity, in suspension and functionally intact derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cell-enriched suspensions obtained by leukapheresis (LP) from healthy volunteers and cancer patients. The semiclosed, easy to handle CCE system, was adapted to a sterile technique that permitted clinical trials in adoptive monocyte immunotherapy. Freshly isolated Mo did not lose morphological or functional integrity and had no spontaneous activation. Their abilities to become activated to the cytotoxic state after 18-h stimulation with 500 U/ml rIFN-gamma or 1 microgram/ml L-MTP-PE and to differentiate into matured M phi in vitro were not altered. The system was therefore used to isolate large numbers of Mo for a phase I clinical trial of intraperitoneal immunotherapy with L-MTP-PE activated autologous Mo in nine patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis. Each patient received weekly Mo infusions (n = 5) with an intrapatient dose escalation schedule (from 10(7) to 10(9) Mo). Toxicities were mild including fever,
chills
and
abdominal pain
. There was no treatment-induced thromboembolic event or capillary leak syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Apheresis-elutriation program for adoptive immunotherapy with autologous activated monocytes in cancer patients. 186 56
In 45 patients with acute obstructive cholangitis (AOC) endoscopic sphincterotomy (ES) was performed within 24 hours after admission. Criteria for the diagnosis of AOC were as follows: clinical symptoms consisting of fever and
chills
, right upper
abdominal pain
, and jaundice (Charcot's triad) with coexisting laboratory data as elevated WBC, ERS, bilirubin level and evidence of obstructive biliary disease confirmed by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. The causes of AOC were: in 38 patients (84.5%)--common bile duct stones, in 2 patients (4.5%)--carcinoma of the papilla of Vater, and in 5 patients (11%)--benign stenosis of the papilla of Vater. A rapid clinical improvement was observed in 40 patients after ES. Within 24 hours after ES patients had relief of pain, fever subsided and white blood cell count returned from 11.7 +/- 6.9 G/l to 7.0 +/- 3.0 G/l. Bilirubin level decreased from 101 +/- 86 mumol/l to 77 +/- 68 mumol/l. Endoscopic drainage failed only in 4 patients (9%) who required surgery. One patient (2%)--died. In the treatment of acute obstructive cholangitis urgent endoscopic sphincterotomy should be a method of choice. Surgery should be reserved only for patients in whom ES failed.
...
PMID:[Emergency endoscopic sphincterotomy in acute obstructive cholangitis]. 186 19
We present two patients with Hantaan virus infection, admitted to the Department of Nephrology, Skopje, at the same time, with the same clinical presentation (
chills
, fever,
abdominal pain
, hemorrhages, nausea, headache, proteinuria, hematuria, oliguria, acute renal failure) but with different pathohistological findings and different disease courses. In the first case diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis was found, with a complete recovery of renal function after a month, with a mild proteinuria and erythruria during the second and the third month. In the second case, glomeruli were normal in general, with slight mesangial proliferation found in two out of twenty, but interstitial edema, lymphocyte infiltrations and tubular changes were noted. Complete recovery was not noted after 3 months of follow-up. The patient is now without hemodialysis treatment, with polyuria, in the stable phase of chronic renal failure which is not improving.
...
PMID:Different pathohistological presentations of acute renal involvement in Hantaan virus infection: report of two cases. 198 98
A 46-year-old man presented with a four-week history of fevers, occasional
chills
, and a two-week history of sweats and poor appetite. He also complained of progressive weakness and lethargy. After initial evaluation, while awaiting further consultation, the patient developed rapidly progressing
abdominal pain
and light-headedness. He was moved immediately into the emergency treatment area. He was noted to have an acute abdomen and was taken to surgery. An enlarged Hodgkin's-infiltrated spleen with an actively bleeding hematoma was removed. The patient denied any history of trauma.
...
PMID:Spontaneous rupture of the spleen in initial presentation of Hodgkin's disease. 200 74
We have conducted a phase I study with autologous monocytes activated ex vivo and administered intraperitoneally in nine patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis. Blood monocytes were collected by leukapheresis and then purified by counterflow elutriation (up to 10(9) cells, with a purity of greater than 90%). Ex vivo activation was obtained by incubating these cells with 1 micrograms liposomal MTP-PE/10(6) monocytes for 18 hours in hydrophobic culture bags at 37 degrees C in 5% carbon dioxide humidified air. The activated monocytes were then infused in the peritoneal cavity once a week for 5 consecutive weeks through an implanted peritoneal infusion system, Port-A-Cath (Pharmacia Deltec, St Paul, MN), on an intrapatient dose-escalating schedule (10(7) to 10(9) monocytes). No severe adverse reactions occurred. Toxicity was mild, the chief acute reactions being fever (27%),
chills
(13%), and
abdominal pain
(25%). None of the side effects led to dose reduction. No consistent change in hemostatic function, liver function, or renal function was observed. Significant increases in granulocyte counts, neopterine, and acute phase reactants (fibrinogen, C-reactive protein) occurred in the peripheral blood. In vitro monocyte activation was demonstrated by the relapse of procoagulant activity and monokines (interleukin-1 [IL-1], IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNF alpha]) in the supernatants of cultured monocytes. Evidence for in vivo monocyte activation was provided by the increase of these monokines in the peritoneal fluids. Kinetic studies with indium-111 (111In)-labeled activated autologous monocytes in five patients suggest that these infused monocytes may remain in the peritoneal cavity for up to 7 days. This locoregional immunotherapeutic approach seems to be encouraging in view of adjuvant therapeutic modality in ovarian cancer patients with minimal residual intraabdominal disease following second-look laparotomy.
...
PMID:Phase I study of liposomal MTP-PE-activated autologous monocytes administered intraperitoneally to patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis. 204 66
The role of endoscopic papillotomy in calculous cholangitis is unclear. A retrospective review of 41 patients admitted to hospital with calculous cholangitis was carried out. There were 30 women and 11 men and their ages ranged between 49 and 98 years (mean age 77). All patients presented with
abdominal pain
, tenderness,
chills
, and fever. Clinical jaundice was present in 95 per cent of the patients. Initial endoscopic papillotomy was successful in 17 of the 41 patients. In 24 patients cholangitis persisted or recurred and further therapy was carried out. Surgery was successful in controlling sepsis in ten of the 24 patients. Repeat endoscopic papillotomy was successful in four of 13 patients. Surgery was successful in one of nine patients who had failed repeat endoscopic papillotomy. Nasobiliary drainage and percutaneous transhepatic drainage of the common bile duct after failed repeat endoscopic papillotomy was successful in only two of nine patients. Six patients died after failed repeat endoscopic papillotomy. We conclude that initial endoscopic papillotomy should be attempted in patients with calculous cholangitis. Surgical exploration of the common bile duct should then be carried out if initial endoscopic papillotomy fails to control cholangitis.
...
PMID:The role of endoscopic papillotomy in ascending cholangitis. 205 44
The 11 cases of malaria admitted to Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital in the past 10 years were analyzed to assess the characteristics of patients who acquired malaria parasite infection. Nine of the patients contracted malaria in Southeast Asia. Two men had received antimalarial chemoprophylaxis before they went abroad and another two men relapsed after antimalarial treatment. The initial symptoms and signs were nonspecific, including fever,
chills
,
abdominal pain
and hepatosplenomegaly. Seven patients responded well to the antimalarial regimens. Two persons developed meningeal malaria. Resistance to chloroquine and primaquine and even to quinine was noted in another two cases. Hypoglycemia was diagnosed in one of latter two patients who developed heavy parasitemia (26%), acute renal failure and died 5 days after treatment. Peripheral blood smear examination is a simple and quick method to make a diagnosis in any suspicious case. Resistance to chloroquine and primaquine is not uncommon, especially in those who acquired the infection in Southeast Asia. Changing to more potent agents and aggressive management in complicated cases is necessary.
...
PMID:Clinical experience on malaria. 205 63
In this study we examined the clinical and laboratory findings of 80 in-patients. There is an important difference between sexes (p greater than 0.05). Comparison of ages showed that 7-30 age is more vulnerable than the older group. We found clinical symptoms of fever,
chills
, headache,
abdominal pain
, disturbances in bowel function, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and lassitude in the first two weeks more frequently when compared with the 3rd, 4th, 5th weeks of illness (p less than 0.001). Where physical finding of rose spots, discordant pulse rate are important in the first two weeks (p less than 0.001). Abdominal discomfort is an important symptom both in the first two and in the last three weeks (% 40.3 and % 36 respectively). Hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, were found more frequently in the last three weeks. According to laboratory findings of anemia, leukopenia, increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate and positive blood and feces cultures there is no important difference between the first two and last three weeks (p greater than 0.05). Increase in polynuclear leucocytes is important for the first two weeks, and increase in lymphocytes is important in the last three weeks (p less than 0.001). Positivity of group agglutination tests is 57%, in the first two weeks and 83% in the last three weeks. This difference is found to be important.
...
PMID:[Comparison of symptoms and clinical and laboratory findings in the first and last weeks of typhoid fever]. 208 33
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