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

A presumptive diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) is usually made in our gynecologic clinics when obscure, acute lower abdominal pain is accompained by fever and abnormal vaginal discharge, urinary and rectal discomfort, marked tenderness of the pelvic organs to palpation, or pelvic masses. In the present study, during a 2-year period, 223 women underwent laparoscopy to confirm this diagnosis. PID was confirmed in 103 (46.2%) of the cases; other serious conditions were diagnosed in 69 (30.9%) of the cases; and no evidence of disease was found in 51 (22.9%) of the cases. The authors conclude that laparoscopy is a valuable tool in the diagnosis of PID.
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PMID:Laparoscopy for the confirmation and prognostic evaluation of pelvic inflammatory disease. 2 3

Patients' assessment of whole gut irrigation via a nasogastric tube has been obtained by a questionnaire answered by 79 of 99 patients who received this method of bowel preparation before operation on the large bowel or colonoscopy. Abdominal pain during the irrigation was experienced by 13 patients (17 per cent) and nausea and vomiting occurred in 24 (30 per cent). Intubation with a nasogastric tube and the discomfort of prolonged sitting on a commode were considered the most disagreeable aspects of the procedure. Fifty-six patients (71 per cent) would have agreed to the irrigation being repeated if necessary and many patients preferred whole gut irrigation to previous 'orthodox' bowel preparations that they had experienced.
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PMID:Whole gut irrigation: a survey of patient opinion. 15 35

A comparative controlled study was carried out in 40 patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthrosis or ankylosing spondylitis to assess the efficacy of ketoprofen and ibuprofen. Patients were allocated at random to receive either 100 mg ketoprofen twice daily or 400 mg ibuprofen 3-times daily over a period of 3 months. Subjective overall assessments of symptoms, based on rating scale scores for pain, duration of morning stiffness and inflammation, showed that there was a greater, more rapid and more sustained improvement in those patients treated with ketoprofen. Measurements of inflamed joint size and of grip strength also improved more with ketoprofen than with ibuprofen. Side-effects, notably nausea, epigastric discomfort and abdominal pain, were more frequent and severe with ketoprofen, leading to the withdrawal of 2 patients in the early stage of the trial, and were probably related to the high dosage used. Three patients receiving ibuprofen needed 7 injections of ACTH to control their symptoms.
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PMID:A comparative trial of ketoprofen and ibuprofen in patients with rheumatic disease. 35 May

It is heartening to note that relatively well nourished black children in the United States, a number of whom are, in all probability, lactose intolerant and most of whom are destined to become lactose intolerant adults, are able to consume nutritionally valuable quantities of milk with meals and, on the whole, do not report suffering from any abdominal pain or discomfort. It is also encouraging that this population of over two hundred primary school children consumed, on the average, 75 per cent of the 1/2 pt. milk served with lunch, reported drinking an average of three glasses of milk daily, and the vast majority reported liking milk and a number of other dairy products which are important nutrient sources in their diets.
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PMID:Milk consumption by black and by white pupils in two primary schools. 57 29

Orchialgia is a term that can only lead to confusion with regard to symptoms and etiology of the symptoms. It implies testicular discomfort or testicular pain that is intrascrotal. Testicular pain per se probably is appreciated in the lower abdomen and internal ring and not in the testicular body. Therefore, true orchialgia, namely testicular pain of unknown etiology, would be more appropriately described as lower abdominal pain (in the absence of any inflammatory ailments), which is worsened by testicular pressure or palpation. Treatment of the patient with orchialgia has been a difficult and often unrewarding clinical situation. Return to gainful activity without significant use of analgesics is the desired goal. Microsurgical testicular denervation has been used in 2 patients in an effort to achieve this goal without sacrifice of the testes.
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PMID:The use of microsurgical denervation of the spermatic cord for orchialgia. 75 15

Twenty-three consecutive patients with duodenal ulceration complicated by pyloric stenosis who came under the care of one surgeon were treated by highly selective vagotomy (HSV) combined with digital dilatation of the stenosis through a gastrotomy. No form of drainage procedure was used. Thus the antral "mill" and the pyloric sphineter were left intact. Since the stenosis is usually distal to the pylorus rather than truly pyloric such dilatation does not damage the pyloric ring, although it may on occasion lead to perforation of the first part of the duodenum. The subsequent progress of these patients was compared with that of a similar, consecutive series of 23 patients with pyloric stenosis who were treated by truncal vagotomy with a drainage procedure by other surgeons on the same surgical unit. Patients were followed up for between four months and five years. The clinical assessment was carried out in "blind" fashion at a special gastric follow-up clinic. No evidence of recurrent ulceration was found in either group of patients. Two patients from each group subsequently came to reoperation for the relief of gastric stasis. Twenty-two of the 23 patients (96%) who had undergone HSV plus dilatation eventually achieved a good-to-excellent clinical result (Visick grades 1+2), wheras only 17 of the 23 patients (74%) who had undergone truncal vagotomy with drainage achieved such a result. The main clinical difference between the two groups was that side effects such as diarrhoea and abdominal pain or discomfort were more common after vagotomy with drainage than after HSV. These results bear witness to the remarkable propulsive powers of the gastric antrum after HSV, which were evidently sufficient to overcome any tendency to re-stenosis in more than 90% of patients. The 9% incidence of failure due to re-stenosis could perhaps be avoided if a small duodenoplasty were performed instead of simple digital dilatation. The results support the hypothesis that damage to the antral mill and pyloric sphincter can be avoided in the course of operations for "pyloric" stenosis secondary to duodenal ulceration. Avoidance of the drainage procedure is of benefit to the patient, just as it is in patients who have duodenal ulceration without stenosis.
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PMID:Highly selective vagotomy plus dilatation of the stenosis compared with truncal vagotomy and drainage in the treatment of pyloric stenosis secondary to duodenal ulceration. 95 5

The case of a 58-years-old patient with AIDS is discussed. He presented a progressive disease with discomfort, abdominal pain, hiporexia, fever and weight loss. At the time of admittance in our hospital he had hepatosplenomegaly. The patient worsened and presented asthenia, fever, oedema, ascites, pulmonary congestion and finally jaundice and died. Autopsy findings were indicative of disseminated histoplasmosis with pseudotumoral appearance of the adrenal glands.
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PMID:[Terminal jaundice in progressive disseminated histoplasmosis associated with AIDS. A report of an autopsy case]. 134 Aug 16

Because zinc is an important metabolic requirement for growth and repair of squamous tissue, we questioned whether changes in serum and esophageal tissue zinc were present in patients with reflux esophagitis. To investigate this question, we prospectively studied 49 patients undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for symptoms of abdominal pain and discomfort; 19 patients were taking H2 antagonists at the time of the study. Blood was obtained to measure serum zinc concentrations prior to endoscopy and tissue zinc levels were obtained from esophageal biopsies from the distal, middle, and proximal esophagus in patients who were either endoscopically normal or who exhibited endoscopic esophagitis. Serum zinc concentrations were significantly lower in patients with endoscopic esophagitis compared to the endoscopically normal group (77 +/- 3.8 micrograms/dl vs 88 +/- 2.4 micrograms/dl, P less than 0.02). Distal esophageal tissue concentrations were significantly higher in patients with endoscopic esophagitis compared to the endoscopically normal group (200 +/- 30 micrograms/liter vs 135 +/- 15 micrograms/liter, P less than 0.05); whereas there were no differences between values obtained in the proximal or middle esophagus. Serum and tissue zinc concentrations in patients with esophagitis receiving H2 antagonists were more similar to values obtained in patients who were endoscopically normal than to patients with endoscopic esophagitis without treatment. This study suggests that in endoscopic esophagitis: (1) greater amounts of zinc are concentrated in the rapidly proliferating distal esophageal epithelium, (2) the serum zinc pool may serve as a major zinc source, and (3) decreasing esophageal mucosal inflammation with H2 antagonists may decrease zinc loss via the esophageal epithelium.
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PMID:Serum and tissue zinc concentrations in patients with endoscopic esophagitis. 134 24

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is increasingly being used in adults with gallbladder disease. Despite the exponential increase in the number of laparoscopic cholecystectomies performed in adults, there are very few reports of its use in children. It is thought that gallstone disease is rare in childhood. Since the introduction of ultrasonography, it is used almost routinely for evaluating children with abdominal pain, and cholelithiasis is being increasingly recognized in children. Since the beginning of 1991 we evaluated 7 children for biliary colic, and on sonography gallstones were demonstrated in all of them. 1 boy also had thalassemia and another hyperlipidemia; the other 5 developed symptoms of biliary colic without any history of hematological or other disease. 5 underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy without complication. In the other 2 laparotomy was performed. In 1 suspected damage to the common bile duct during laparoscopy required direct visualization, but no damage was found. In the other, no gallbladder was identified on laparoscopy; laparotomy confirmed the diagnosis of congenital agenesis of the gallbladder with several technical modifications. We found laparoscopic cholecystectomy to be both safe and effective in children. Its advantages include shorter hospitalization, decreased postoperative discomfort and a much shorter interval between operation and return to normal activity.
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PMID:[Laparoscopic cholecystectomy in children]. 138 28

Pain causes considerable disability and discomfort in HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) infected individuals. A large number of patients infected with HIV suffer from one or more pain-related syndromes. Pain is under-reported and suboptimally managed in these patients. An outline of the different pain syndromes, including headache, oral cavity pain, chest pain, abdominal pain, anorectal pain, musculoskeletal pain and peripheral neuropathic pain, and their aetiologies are discussed. Current pain management modalities, including non-narcotic and narcotic analgesics, tricyclic antidepressants, anticonvulsants, physical therapy and psychological techniques, are outlined. Treatment should be based on the same principles applied to the management of cancer-related pain. A multi-disciplinary, comprehensive approach to pain management will assist these individuals to achieve improved levels of comfort, function and quality of life in this ultimately terminal illness.
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PMID:Pain syndromes in HIV infection. 139 63


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