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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute abdominal pain
occurs frequently in patients with sickle cell anaemia (SCA), and presents a difficult diagnostic and management problem as the clinical presentation may mimic an acute surgical condition. Good clinical judgement and careful observation are necessary to avoid increased morbidity and mortality. Chronic recurrent upper
abdominal pain
is also a common problem and in many the cause is unknown. These patients usually respond to simple symptomatic therapy.
...
PMID:Abdominal pain in sickle cell anaemia. 281 9
In 194 patients presenting with
acute abdominal pain
from whom sequential serum samples were taken, the frequency of yersiniosis, established serologically, was significantly higher (23%) than in 320 control subjects (2%). Yersiniosis occurred in 31% of patients with acute appendicitis. Acute-phase serum samples only, obtained in a further 307 patients, yielded a falsely low frequency of yersiniosis (4%). Y pseudotuberculosis was five times more common than Y enterocolitica, and Y pseudotuberculosis type IV was the most common serotype, accounting for 43% of Yersinia infections. Yersinia may play a more important part in the aetiology of
acute abdominal pain
, and particularly acute appendicitis, than has been previously appreciated. Antibody titres to both Y enterocolitica and Y pseudotuberculosis frequently rise late in infections causing
abdominal pain
. Consequently analysis of acute-phase serum samples alone leads to underdiagnosis of yersiniosis.
...
PMID:Yersinia infection and acute abdominal pain. 288 Oct 83
Periarteritis nodosa is characterized by generalized inflammation of medium and small arteries that leads to thrombosis or aneurysmal dilatation. We report the case of a 30-year-old man with no preceding signs or symptoms who presented initially with a chief complaint of mild
abdominal pain
. He deteriorated clinically during the next six to eight hours, and developed shock secondary to a ruptured aneurysm of the left gastric artery. His postoperative course was complicated by recurrent bleeding and death within 48 hours. Our case represents a protean clinical manifestation of periarteritis nodosa and expands the differential diagnosis of
acute abdominal pain
.
...
PMID:An unusual presentation of periarteritis nodosa. 289 98
A 79-yr-old man with previously documented atherosclerotic vascular disease presented with
acute abdominal pain
, signs of peritoneal irritation, and guaiac-positive stool. A mesenteric arteriogram showed high-grade stenosis of the superior mesenteric artery with a pressure gradient of 70 mmHg and complete occlusion of the inferior mesenteric artery. Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty of the superior mesenteric artery was performed with immediate reduction of the pressure gradient, increase in vessel caliber, and relief of
abdominal pain
. The patient went on to complete recovery and remains pain-free 6 mo after discharge from the hospital. To our knowledge, this is the first report of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty used to treat acute mesenteric ischemia.
...
PMID:Treatment of acute mesenteric ischemia by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. 294 29
When patients are admitted to hospital with
acute abdominal pain
, clinicians, irrespective of a specific diagnosis, intuitively select three diagnostic classes: operation definitely required (Group A); operation definitely not required (Group B); need for operation uncertain (Group C). The last is followed either by a precautionary laparotomy or a variable period of observation/investigation. We have studied prospectively the influence of laparoscopy on the distribution between these classes and particularly on outcome in group C. One hundred and twenty-five consecutive patients with
abdominal pain
severe enough for emergency admission have been classified by one of two admitting surgeons (SHO/registrar), who also expressed in group C a view on how they would proceed--operation or observation. Group C were then laparoscoped. The procedure confirmed a provisional view that laparotomy was needed in 11 of 15 patients. In the 'observation' sub-group the provisional decision was confirmed in 14 of 16 and early discharge followed in most. Six inappropriate decisions were thus avoided. Seven management decisions in group A and 4 in group B proved incorrect (11/94: 12 per cent). The majority were potentially recognizable by laparoscopy. Though relatively high rates of successful decision making are achieved with conventional clinical techniques, they can be further improved by laparoscopy. This procedure is particularly applicable in the management of patients with
acute abdominal pain
without a definite diagnosis, or when appendicitis is regarded as an established diagnosis.
...
PMID:Laparoscopy as an adjunct to decision making in the 'acute abdomen'. 294 59
This preliminary communication describes the initial results of a further special study investigating the disease spectrum and clinical presentation in a total of 1080 children admitted to hospital with
acute abdominal pain
(677 from the Children's Hospital, Sheffield, England, and the remaining 403 from hospitals in Paris, Oslo, Copenhagen, and Deventer). The disease spectrum in children differs radically from that in adults, well over 90% of cases being due to either acute appendicitis or non-specific
abdominal pain
(NSAP). The clinical presentation of both appendicitis and NSAP was found to differ from that in older age groups. These findings imply clearly that the use of the existing OMGE database for computer-aided diagnosis--using data drawn from cases of all ages--may not be optimal in children. A fresh database (using only children's data) was therefore created and tested. Its sensitivity for appendicitis was equivalent to that of inexperienced clinicians (79.6% versus 77.3%). The computer's specificity (over 70%) was higher than that of clinicians (52.7%). The findings also re-emphasise the value of disciplined data collection, and the implications for teaching are discussed.
...
PMID:Acute abdominal pain in children. 304 47
This report explores the role of computer aided diagnosis in
acute abdominal pain
when applied by non-medically qualified personnel. Clinical features of 153 patients (75 males, 78 females, aged range 6-92 years, median 35 years) suffering from less than one weeks'
abdominal pain
were recorded. Junior doctors' diagnostic accuracy with (65 cases) and without (70 cases) structured computer history sheets were compared with first year clinical medical students using the computer system (46 cases: 28 also seen by doctor, 18 cases student only). These students had no previous surgical training or experience. Doctors' diagnostic accuracy of 51% rose significantly to 69% with the use of structured history forms (chi 2 = 4.53, P = less than 0.05). Computer assisted clinical students' diagnostic accuracy matched the improved doctors' accuracy (69.5%). These results have implications not only for medical education but also for isolated paramedical personnel who should be supplied with structured diagnostic forms and, where appropriate, a microcomputer.
...
PMID:Acute abdominal pain: computer aided diagnosis by non-medically qualified staff. 331 36
The records of all (5080) patients presenting to a district general hospital with
acute abdominal pain
over a 4-year period were examined. The contribution of abdominal radiographs to the assessment of patients with suspected appendicitis, urinary tract infection, and non-specific
abdominal pain
was evaluated, these conditions accounting for 48 per cent of patients with
abdominal pain
and 32 per cent of those with abdominal radiographs. Any positive information from these radiographs was less likely to be helpful than incidental or inconsistent (and hence potentially misleading). Because of this high 'false positive' rate it is suggested that if the initial diagnosis is suspected appendicitis, urinary tract infection, or non-specific
abdominal pain
, there is little value in the routine use of abdominal radiographs.
...
PMID:Plain abdominal radiographs and acute abdominal pain. 339 21
This paper describes the management consequences of the use of a microcomputer as a special investigation in patients with an acute abdomen. Results in 812 patients seen by 42 junior doctors are compared six monthly and with baseline data from 295 cases from the preceding 2 years. Improvement in diagnostic ability from 48.5% to 71.8% (X2 = 25.8, P less than 0.001) resulted in a fall in negative appendicectomy from 37.5% to 9.71% (X2 = 16.2, P = less than 0.001). Bad management errors were also reduced from 22% to 10% (P = less than 0.01). The number of emergency investigation fell from 4 to 2 and inpatient stay of patients with non-surgical
abdominal pain
was reduced from 3 to 2 days. These results demonstrate that the use of microcomputers as investigative tools improves the surgical management of patients with
acute abdominal pain
.
...
PMID:The acute abdomen: management with microcomputer aid. 353 84
The present paper deals with an application of a three-stage classifier based on a decision tree logic to the diagnosis of
acute abdominal pain
. On the basis of clinical information collected from a series of 476 patients suffering from
abdominal pain
of acute onset, the method of multistage classifier synthesis is presented. The results of classification accuracy using a modified version of k-nearest neighbours strategy for different features used at interior nodes of a tree are given.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of acute abdominal pain using a three-stage classifier. 354 63
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