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

An 8-year-old boy presented with elevated temperature, malaise, hepatosplenomegaly, mesenteric adenitis, and septic shock. Cultures of biopsied abdominal lymph nodes as well as the blood grew Yersinia pestes. The boy's condition improved after two weeks of chloramphenicol and cefotaxime (Claforan). Two days after stopping intravenous antibiotic therapy, the patient again became febrile and complained of abdominal pain. Abdominal imaging with 111In-labeled leukocytes did not show any abnormalities, however, 67Ga-citrate scintigraphy demonstrated an abnormal focus of increased radiopharmaceutical uptake within a confluence of necrosed lymph nodes within the right upper quadrant of the abdomen. In addition, abnormal 67Ga-uptake was seen within the left hip region. Correlative imaging with computed tomography is also presented.
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PMID:Imaging in plague. 366 83

Eighteen of the 71 cases of plague reported in New Mexico from 1980 to 1984 were septicemic. We reviewed these cases to better describe the clinical presentation of this disorder and to identify risk factors for developing septicemic plague. The symptoms (fever, chills, malaise, headache, and gastrointestinal symptoms) and signs (tachycardia, tachypnea, and hypotension) of septicemic plague are similar to those of other forms of gram-negative septicemia. Abdominal pain was reported in nearly half of the cases, and differential white blood cell counts revealed a marked shift to the left. The risk of developing septicemic plague was higher for persons greater than 40 years of age. Because of empirical antibiotic treatment of older persons, deaths from septicemic plague occurred primarily among persons less than 30 years old. Deaths from septicemic plague could be reduced by aggressive antibiotic therapy for patients with a clinical presentation suggesting gram-negative septicemia, especially patients less than 30 years old.
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PMID:Septicemic plague in New Mexico. 379 95

A series of 64 women complaining of severe constipation is described, in each of whom delayed elimination of markers from the colon was demonstrated but a barium enema was normal. All completed a detailed questionnaire and the responses are compared with those obtained in an age-matched series of healthy women with no bowel complaint. In each group 40 women also recorded in a manner suitable for analysis all food eaten over a period of seven days. The patients passed about one stool weekly with the aid of laxatives, and were greatly troubled by abdominal pain, bloating, malaise and nausea, to the extent that the symptoms were a major social disability and many lost time from work. Decreased bowel frequency and other symptoms were often first noticed around the age of puberty and slowly became worse until they were severe by the third decade. In a few, the symptoms began suddenly after an abdominal operation c-accident. Comparison with the control group showed no evidence that the patients had been underweight at any time or that they took less fibre; treatment with a bran supplement did not usually help them. The patients experienced rectal sensation before defaecation less often than the control subjects and they used digital pressure to assist defaecation more frequently. The women with constipation tended to have more painful and irregular menstrual periods, and there was an increased incidence of ovarian cystectomy and hysterectomy. Hesitancy in starting to pass urine was more common, as were some somatic symptoms such as cold hands or blackouts. Attention is drawn to this distinctive combination in young women of slow total gut transit time and a colon of normal width on barium enema, associated with abdominal, anorectal, gynaecological and somatic symptoms, as a disorder which can be disabling and particularly difficult to treat.
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PMID:Severe chronic constipation of young women: 'idiopathic slow transit constipation'. 394 36

We studied 34 patients with alcoholic liver disease presenting for the first time over the age of 60 years. Symptoms were usually non-specific including malaise (62%), anorexia (41%) and abdominal pain (38%). The most prominent sign was hepatomegaly (79%). Seventy-nine per cent of the patients had established cirrhosis at the time of presentation. For this group the prognosis was very poor, 48% died within one year of presentation.
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PMID:Alcoholic liver disease in the elderly: presentation and outcome. 400 82

A white homosexual man presented with a 6-week history of intermittent diarrhoea, abdominal pain, nausea and malaise. Threadworm infestation was present, but other gastro-intestinal infection was excluded. Rectal spirochaetosis was found on examination of a rectal biopsy specimen. The patient's symptoms disappeared and the rectal tissue returned to normal on biopsy after treatment with metronidazole and mebendazole. It is suggested that the symptoms were directly related to the presence of rectal spirochaetosis, which responded to the antibiotic.
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PMID:Rectal spirochaetosis--symptomatic response to metronidazole and mebendazole. A case report. 403 98

The presenting features of seven elderly patients with pyogenic liver abscess were reviewed retrospectively. Symptoms of malaise, anorexia and abdominal pain referrable to intra-abdominal pathology were present in only 43% cases and physical examination was frequently unhelpful. Leucocytosis, hyperbilirubinaemia and raised alkaline phosphatase were of diagnostic value in the majority of patients. Chest and urinary tract infections were frequent predisposing conditions. Antibiotic therapy for four weeks is adequate in elderly patients if combined with drainage procedures.
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PMID:Clinical presentation of pyogenic liver abscess in the elderly. 407 22

Analysis of 56 patients with obstructive jaundice due to carcinoma of the pancreas or extrahepatic biliary tree showed that unexpected features were present in 25%. Presentation with painless jaundice was uncommon, and the symptoms were more often non-specific, with malaise, anorexia, and vomiting. Abdominal pain was frequent, and the condition was found in young patients. One-fifth presented with serum alkaline phosphatase levels of less than 30 K.A. units. Some had high serum aspartate aminotransferase levels, more characteristic of hepatocellular jaundice. A mathematical model may be helpful in correctly weighting these various criteria.
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PMID:Pitfalls in the diagnosis of jaundice due to carcinoma of the pancreas or biliary tree. 451 75

Early recognition of pyogenic liver abscess requires a high index of suspicion. The abrupt onset of hectic fevers and jaundice is rarely seen today; instead, an insidious progression of malaise, abdominal pain, and night sweats is more common. Biliary tract disease is the most frequent underlying disorder. An elevated alkaline phosphatase is a useful clue to the condition, but diagnosis depends on imaging of an abscess cavity followed by aspiration. Treatment involves antibiotics together with drainage, which can often be performed successfully by a nonsurgical percutaneous approach. However, prognosis continues to be poor unless the diagnosis is made promptly.
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PMID:Pyogenic liver abscess: new concepts of an old disease. 636 2

The aetiology of acute pancreatitis in dogs is rather obscure. Although experimental studies may reveal a number of causative factors, an aetiological diagnosis is rarely established in 'spontaneous' pancreatitis. The pathogenesis and pathophysiology are reviewed. Activated trypsin plays a leading role in the injury to the pancreas, the ischaemia of the tissues and the disseminated intravascular coagulation. Vomiting, abdominal pain and general malaise are prominent features in the externally perceptible symptoms. Examination of the blood is of importance both in establishing the diagnosis and in determining the course of the disease. Great caution is indicated in setting store by individual results of haematological studies. There is neither a biochemical nor a haematological method of estimation today, by which acute haemorrhagic necrotic pancreatitis can be shown to be present or ruled out with one hundred per cent certainty. Treatment of the disease is mainly symptomatic. Complete withdrawal of food and water is the most important factor. Intravenous fluid therapy, anti-emetics, analgesics and possibly antibiotics are the main adjuncts to treatment. The prognosis will largely depend on the stage of the disease and the extent to which complications have occurred at the time.
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PMID:[Acute pancreatitis in dogs. A literature study]. 636 36

Within a three-year period 712 patients with Campylobacter jejuni infection were diagnosed at our laboratory in Helsinki and 524 (72%) were treated as outpatients. More than half (57%) of the patients became infected when abroad, chiefly during holiday trips in the Mediterranean and in East European countries. The risk of acquiring infection was about 250 times greater abroad than in Finland, and it differed considerably from country to country, being highest in Morocco and Tunisia. Among domestic cases the incidence of infection was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) during the summer and autumn months than during winter or spring. Animal contact prior to infection was reported in 59% of domestic and 31% of imported cases, and previous consumption of poultry in 28% and 42% of those from whom information was obtained. Besides diarrhoea (98%), the main symptoms included abdominal pain (87%), fatigue (81%), fever (78%), malaise (70%) and headache (51%). Arthralgia was observed in 19% and arthritis in 2% of patients. The mean duration of diarrhoea was 10.8 days, of fever 2.8 days.
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PMID:Infection due to Campylobacter jejuni: a report of 524 outpatients. 646 63


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