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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 27 year-old alcoholic patient with severe acute pancreatitis (4 Ranson's objective prognostic signs), complained of
abdominal pain
and vomiting and presented fever and
rigors
. The plasma was of milky turbidity and the concentration of triglycerides (TG) very high (26 Mmol/l, Normal: 3-1.6). Serum pancreatic amylase was elevated (262 U/l, Normal: 10-200). The electrocardiogram (ECG) showed S-T depression. The diagnosis was confirmed by computed tomography which showed a pancreatic phlegmon and a collection in the left pararenal space (Ranson's grade D). After PE on days 1 and 2: the amylase became normal, plasma clear, TG decreased (7.8 Mmol/l), the clinical picture improved and the ECG normal. Assisted ventilation was necessary over 10 days. Pancreatic morphology remained unchanged. The patient was discharged to intensive care on day 18. There was no indication for surgery. The fast drop in TG levels, the precursors of free fatty acids, may have limited their toxicity the pancreas, allowing a difficult stage to be over come and the course of the illness to interrupted. Normalization of the ECG requires emphasis. The association of HG, increased plasma amylase and
abdominal pain
justifies early iterative PE.
...
PMID:[Major hypertriglyceridemia, associated with severe acute pancreatitis, successfully treated with plasma exchange]. 247 Feb 83
Three patients are described with recurrent jaundice, upper
abdominal pain
and
rigors
attributable to dextropropoxyphene hepatotoxicity. The diagnosis was established in each patient by rechallenge; post challenge hepatic histology is reported in two. Twelve previous patients with probable dextropropoxyphene hepatic toxicity have been described and are reviewed. In 10 of the 15 patients, a clinical diagnosis of gall stone disease was made. Liver function tests are usually hepatitic shortly after challenge, but more cholestatic after a few days. No fatalities have been described, but as dextropropoxyphene is widely available in many different analgesic preparations possible toxicity should be considered in patients with relapsing jaundice mimicking biliary disease, in whom gall stones have been excluded.
...
PMID:Dextropropoxyphene induced hepatotoxicity mimicking biliary tract disease. 395 12
Sterilization by tubal occlusive methods is not always successful. This fact is not, however, well recognized among general surgeons. When failures occur, ectopic pregnancy is the usual outcome, most commonly in the Fallopian tube. Ectopic pregnancy has a reported mortality of approximately 3.5/1000, with the majority of deaths associated with delay in diagnosis. The failure to consider this possibility of ectopic pregnancy after tubal ligation when female patients present with right-sided
abdominal pain
causes health personnel to commonly misdiagnose the condition of appendicitis. A 26 year old woman presented to the Accident and Emergency Department of the Royal Hobart Hospital with lower
abdominal pain
mainly in the right iliac fossa. Pain was intermittent for two weeks prior to presentation. On the morning of presentation, the pain became severe and was exacerbated by coughing and movements. The patient was nauseated, but had not vomited; there was neither fever nor
rigors
. Four years earlier, in England, the patient had undergone elective laparoscopic sterilization. Sexually active, she believed that she was menstruating at the time of presentation, especially since her last menstruation occurred four weeks previously. The patient was noted upon examination to have a "grey look," pulse rate of 80 beats/minute, blood pressure of 120/80 mmHg, and a generally tender abdomen, maximally in the right iliac fossa. There were no bowel sounds and rectal examination proved to be extremely painful in all directions. The accident and emergency staff took blood for a full blood count, serum human chorionic gonadotrophin, and arranged surgical consultation. The surgical diagnosis was for acute appendicitis and the patient was transferred to the operating theater for appendectomy. Just prior to anesthetic induction, the pathology results became available, indicating a hemoglobin of 10.3 g/dl and a positive serum HCG. The diagnosis was thus revised to ruptured ectopic pregnancy and laparotomy was performed through a Pfannenstiel incision. 1000 ml of blood was removed from the peritoneal cavity, a ruptured tubal pregnancy was found in the right distal tube, and the appendix was normal. A right salpingo-oophorectomy was performed after which the patient recovered uneventfully and was discharged five days postoperatively. Histopathology confirmed a ruptured ectopic gestation.
...
PMID:Misdiagnosis of appendicitis in tubally sterilized women. 846 65
A 59-year-old man presented with painful subcutaneous nodules on the anterior surfaces of the legs. He had received oral antibiotics and supportive care for presumed cellulitis and thrombophlebitis, but had minimal improvement. Five months earlier, he had undergone pancreaticoduodenectomy for acinar pancreatic carcinoma; at that time, the serum level of amylase had been normal, but the level of lipase was elevated. The patient denied fever,
rigors
, arthritis/arthralgia, or pleuritic pain. His medications included aspirin, furosemide, ranitidine, and nortriptyline. He denied any allergies. Physical examination revealed numerous firm, tender, erythematous and violaceous, subcutaneous nodules on the lower extremities, with marked bilateral pitting edema (Fig. 1). Skin biopsy of a representative lesion revealed septal panniculitis, consistent with erythema nodosum (Fig. 2). None of the characteristic changes of pancreatic fat necrosis was present. The patient was treated with aspirin, 650 mg orally, q 6 h, and indomethacin, 50 mg orally, q 12 h, but he continued to develop new nodules; prednisone, 60 mg orally was begun. Although he reported improvement in symptoms, the nodules failed to respond clinically and older nodules ulcerated along the medical aspect of the right leg (Fig. 3). The complete blood count was normal, except for hemoglobin, 10.9 mg per dL. Routine serum biochemical studies were also normal, except for albumin, 3.1 mg per dL, LDH, 312 U per L, and SGOT, 51 U per L. Serum amylase was 14 U per L (normal per 30 to 115 U per L) and serum lipase was 54,160 U per L (normal 0 to 200 U per L). Chest roentgenogram and tuberculin skin test were negative. A CT scan of the abdomen revealed extensive liver metastases. A second biopsy of the skin and subcutis of a necrotic nodule revealed lobular panniculitis with the characteristic picture seen in pancreatic fat necrosis (Fig. 4). The patient was presumed to have metastatic pancreatic carcinoma and pancreatic fat necrosis. Nodules subsequently developed on the thighs, arms, hands, wrists, and fingers. He developed arthritis and arthralgias of the ankles, wrists, and hands, bilaterally, and the right knee. Aspiration of a right knee effusion revealed numerous neutrophils, but no evidence of infection. Treatment was begun with the somatostatin analog, octreotide, in increasing doses. During this therapy, the lesions did not progress and new lesions did not appear. There was no change in the lipase level. Inadvertently, octreotide was omitted at discharge, but reintroduction of octreotide was associated with lack of further progression of the nodules, according to the patient's spouse; however the patient became progressively debilitated and his
abdominal pain
worsened, requiring continuous sedation. His condition deteriorated and he died several weeks after hospital discharge.
...
PMID:Fat necrosis with features of erythema nodosum in a patient with metastatic pancreatic carcinoma. 883 28
An uncommon and late complication of side-to-side choledochoduodenostomy (CDD), the 'sump syndrome', developed in a patient 4 years after surgery. Recurrent right upper
abdominal pain
, fever with chills and
rigors
and latterly, mild jaundice made her seek repeated hospital admissions which were treated successfully with antibiotics. During the last admission, ultrasonography, endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC), computerized scanning (CT) and hepatic iminodiacetic acid (HIDA) scan using Tc99m confirmed multiple intrahepatic calculi with proximal dilatation, debris in the distal blind segment and delayed excretion through the CDD. At surgery, the choledochoduodenostomy was taken down and a Rouxen-Y hepaticojejunostomy (RHJ) was fashioned after ductal clearance. The closed end of the Roux loop was placed subcutaneously for subsequent percutaneous access for cholangiography and removal of calculi. She is asymptomatic and well 28 months after surgery.
...
PMID:Recurrent pyogenic cholangitis: 'sump syndrome' following choledochoduodenostomy. 903 26
A hospital based retrospective study of amoebiasis was carried out for a ten-year period at the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur. Of the 51 cases traced, 30 (59%) had amoebic dysentery, 20 (39%) were amoebic liver abscess (ALA) and one patient had both conditions. Entameoba histolytica trophozoites were identified in 13 (43%) of the amoebic dysenteric stools and 9 (30%) from biopsy. Of the 20 (39%) ALA cases, only one showed parasites in the stool and biopsy. Majority of the patients with dysentery were Malays while Chinese comprised 40% with ALA. Males predominated overall with a male female ratio of 3:1, while for ALA it was 9:1. Most of ALA were single (71.4%) and were localised in the right lobe. The majority of the patients were unemployed. Eighty three percent (83%) of the patients presented with diarrhoea or dysentery followed by
abdominal pain
while those with ALA had fever, chills,
rigors
and pain in the right hypochondrium. Eighty percent of the ALA cases showed hepatomegaly. All patients responded to treatment with metronidazole.
...
PMID:Amoebiasis: a 10 year retrospective study at the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur. 1104 54
Mycotic aneurysms have been associated with many clinical conditions. A tender pulsatile abdominal mass in association with fever, chills, and unrelenting back pain is suggestive of a leaking mycotic aneurysm. However, the extracranial manifestations of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome (THS) may mimic several of these symptoms. We report the case of a woman who was successfully treated with high-dose steroids for THS. Two months later, she was admitted to another hospital with
rigors
and unremitting back and
abdominal pain
. CT-guided aspiration of an L5-S1 paravertebral mass was done. The aspirate and blood cultures grew Staphylococcus aureus. Intravenous antibiotics and analgesics were administered with good relief. A month after discharge from that hospital, she was admitted to our hospital with classic signs and symptoms of a leaking mycotic aneurysm. She was treated surgically and has remained asymptomatic for 21 months. Tolosa-Hunt syndrome associated with mycotic aortic aneurysms has not been previously reported.
...
PMID:Mycotic aortic aneurysm in a patient with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 1133 16
Meningococcal septicaemia has high mortality, especially when the diagnosis is delayed or missed. Early recognition is not always straightforward, as classic clinical features may be absent or overlooked at initial presentation. Septicaemia without focal infection accounts for 15%-20% of cases of meningococcal disease and is the most worrisome manifestation in terms of diagnosis and outcome; in contrast, meningococcal meningitis is usually straightforward to diagnose, with a relatively good prognosis. Useful early clinical clues to meningococcaemia include: - a haemorrhagic (petechial or purpuric) rash; - blanching macular or maculopapular rash that appears in first 24 hours of illness; - true
rigors
; - severe pain in extremities, neck or back; vomiting, especially in association with headache or
abdominal pain
; rapid evolution of the illness; - concern of parents, relatives or friends; - patient age (highest incidence at age 3-12 months, followed by 1-4 and then 15-19 years); and - contact with a patient with meningococcal disease. In addition to specific clues, clinicians should look at the whole pattern of the illness. Timely clinical review is essential if there is doubt about the diagnosis. In any acutely febrile patient, it is prudent to ask "Why is this patient seeking help now?", then "Could this patient have meningococcaemia?".
...
PMID:Early clinical clues to meningococcaemia. 1255 87
Acute cholangitis is more common in older people, and increasing age is a determinant of morbidity and mortality, as is early biliary decompression by ERCP. This study aims to identify factors that may contribute to delays in the diagnosis and treatment of older people with acute cholangitis. Case notes of 122 patients (45 aged < 75 years, 77 > 75 years) with a final diagnosis of acute cholangitis who underwent ERCP were reviewed for presenting clinical features (pain, jaundice,
rigors
, fever, falls, incontinence, confusion), liver function tests, blood count, and the interval from admission to diagnosis, ultrasonography, and ERCP. The most common symptom at presentation was
abdominal pain
(81%), followed by jaundice (55%). These symptoms were no less common in older patients. Charcot's triad was present in only 15.6% of young and 18.8% of older patients. Jaundice was not detected in 16% of significantly hyperbilirubinemic older patients, but only the presence of functional symptoms was associated with significant diagnostic delay (median, 1 day [range: 0-11] vs. 9.5 days [3-25]; P< 0.001) and delay in performing ERCP (median: 4 days [0-24] vs. 16.5 days [2-29], P< 0.001). Overall mortality was 10%, and the incidence of septic shock was similar in both groups. Charcot's classical triad is infrequent in patients suffering from acute cholangitis. Given the greater difficulty assessing jaundice in older people and the confounding effect of falls, incontinence, and confusion, a routine policy of liver function tests, with further investigation of abnormal results in such presentations, may reduce delays in diagnosing and treating acute cholangitis.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation and delayed treatment of cholangitis in older people. 1641 62
A 70-year-old man with abdominal aortic aneurysm repair presented with fever accompanied by
rigors
and
abdominal pain
one month after the procedure. Radiological investigations showed a perigraft collection. The collection was drained and the abscess cavity was lavaged. Cultures of pus and blood both yielded Group D Salmonella (non-typhi), which was treated with ceftriaxone and ciprofloxacin. The patient was followed-up for the past eight months without any further symptoms. Perigraft infections post abdominal aortic aneurysm repair could be caused by enteric organisms and must be treated with long-term appropriate antibiotics, depending on the microbiological finding, besides surgical drainage and lavage.
...
PMID:Perigraft infections due to Salmonella after abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. 1869 53
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