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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twelve patients with meconium ileus equivalent complicating cystic fibrosis in the postneonatal period were seen at the Mayo Clinic in the years 1950 through 1975. In a child or young adult with known or suspected cystic fibrosis, the triad of recurrent colicky
abdominal pain
, a mass in the right lower quadrant, and mechanical intestinal obstruction provides a clue to diagnosis of meconium ileus equivalent. The clinical suspicion of meconium ileus equivalent may be confirmed by meglumine diatrizoate (
Gastrografin
) enema, which in most uncomplicated cases also serves as treatment.
...
PMID:Meconium ileus equivalent complicating cystic fibrosis in postneonatal children and young adults. Report of 12 cases. 83 31
Meconium ileus equivalent (MIE) can be defined as a clinical manifestation in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients caused by acute intestinal obstruction by putty-like faecal material in the cecum or terminal ileum. A broader definition includes a more chronic condition in CF patients with
abdominal pain
and a coecal mass which may eventually pass spontaneously. The condition occurs only in CF patients with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI). It has not been seen in other CF patients nor in non-CF patients with EPI. The frequency of these symptoms has been reported as 2.4%-25%. Pathophysiologically, MIE is probably caused by a combination of EPI, increased intestinal transit time, and abnormal intestinal mucus. The treatment should primarily be non-operative. Specific treatment with N-acetylcysteine, administrated orally and/or as an enema is recommended. Enemas with the water soluble contrast medium, meglucamine diatrizoate (
Gastrografin
), provide an alternative form for treatment and can also serve diagnostic purposes. It is important that the physician is familiar with this disease entity and the appropriate treatment with the above mentioned drugs. Non-operative treatment is often effective, and dangerous complications following surgery can thus be avoided.
...
PMID:[Meconium ileus equivalent]. 291 55
In emergency, the most commonly used examination, other than plain radiographs of the abdomen, is the water-soluble contrast enema (
Gastrografin
). It demonstrates three different pictures, which may be more or less associated one to the other: "peridiverticulitis", featuring serrate lesions, abnormal stiffness and fixity and, in some cases, a long narrowing or stricture of the colon; diverticula, mainly in the sigmoid colon, becoming sharp-pointed or spark-liked; spillage of contrast material out of the colic lumen or into a neighbouring organ (fistula). Ultrasonography may be a useful emergency procedure to secure a hesitating diagnosis in a patient with a febrile
abdominal pain
or with a abdominal-pelvic mass, especially in women. Colonoscopy and barium enema are both usually contra-indicated in the acute setting of diverticulitis because of their potential hazards. On the other hand, after resolution of the acute event, these tests may allow to rule out carcinoma or associated adenomas (which coexist in more than 15% of the patients). Endoscopic control appears more especially important as initial accurate diagnosis in sometimes impossible to assess between adenocarcinoma and diverticulitis. CT scan has found an increasing place in both diagnosis and evaluation of infectious complications of diverticular disease. It is most recommended to assess the diagnosis of severe episodes, failing to clearly improve after medical treatment, and most particularly when an abscess in suspected. CT scan may demonstrate a thickening of the colic wall, high densities of pericolic fat and a tissular mass which may enclose gas bubbles.
...
PMID:[Radiological and endoscopic diagnosis of sigmoid diverticulitis]. 776 82
Diagnostic and therapeutic ERCPs are complicated by pancreatitis in 1% to 10% of patients, and evidence suggests that the contrast agent used for ERCP may be important in the pathogenesis of such pancreatitis. This prospective, double-blind study was undertaken to determine whether the use of a low-osmolality, nonionic contrast agent (Omnipaque 300; iohexol, 672 mOsm/kg H2O) would reduce the frequency and severity of postprocedure pancreatitis as compared to a high-osmolality, ionic contrast agent (
Hypaque
50%; diatrizoate sodium, 1515 mOsm/kg H20). Six hundred ninety patients undergoing diagnostic ERCP (pancreatogram, cholangiogram, or both) either with or without sphincter of Oddi manometry and therapy were randomized to iohexol or diatrizoate sodium. Postprocedure pancreatitis was diagnosed when the serum amylase or lipase level was elevated to at least four times the upper limits of normal at 18 hours and was associated with increased
abdominal pain
persisting for at least 24 hours after the procedure that required administration of narcotic analgesics. The pancreatitis was graded as mild, moderate, or severe depending on the length of hospital stay and the need for intervention. The overall frequency (7.2% versus 7.5%) and severity (4.3% mild, 2% moderate, 0.9% severe for the diatrizoate sodium group versus 4.3% mild, 2.6% moderate, and 0.6% severe for the iohexol group) of postprocedure pancreatitis and the frequency and severity within each procedure category were similar for the two contrast agent groups (p > .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Post-ERCP pancreatitis: randomized, prospective study comparing a low- and high-osmolality contrast agent. 792 31
A 31 year old male presented with high grade fever and
abdominal pain
of 20 days duration. At the age of 9 he had been operated on for a solitary retroperitoneal hydatid cyst and had been asymptomatic until the age of 21 when he sustained a blunt injury to the abdomen. An exploratory laparotomy for splenic rupture revealed multiple intra-abdominal hydatid cysts, which were removed. The patient remained well until the present episode. An ultrasound examination revealed multiple intra-abdominal hydatid cysts. Seven days after admission, the patient developed hydatidemesis (hydatid cysts and membranes in the vomitus) and hydatidenteria (passage of hydatid membranes in the stools), and his pain and fever subsided. A
Gastrografin
study and a computerized tomography (CT) scan revealed hydatid cysts communicating with the stomach and duodenum. In view of his disseminated recurrent abdominal hydatidosis, he was treated with high dose, long-term albendazole along with regular follow up. This is the first documented case of disseminated abdominal hydatidosis presenting with a cystogastric fistula and hydatidemesis.
...
PMID:Hydatidemesis: a bizarre presentation of abdominal hydatidosis. 849 23
Paraduodenal hernia is a rare condition in which the small bowel loops are herniated into an unusual fossa in the periduodenal area. We treated a patient with paraduodenal hernia diagnosed preoperatively. A 28-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of intermittent
abdominal pain
. Abdominal ultrasonography revealed a large tumor adjacent to the pancreas. Provisional diagnosis made according to computed tomography (CT) findings was tumor of the pancreas tail. However, on a CT scan performed after the administration of diatrizoate meglumine/diatrizoate sodium (
Gastrografin
, Schering, Berlin, Germany) the mass was shown as a jejunum loop located between the stomach and the pancreas body. Subsequent laparotomy revealed that the jejunum loop was herniated into an unusually large mesocolic fossa and that the hernial orifice was covered by the adhesion between the transverse and descending colons. It seemed that the small intestine within the mesocolic fossa was strangulated by this adhesion. The patient's
abdominal pain
resolved postoperatively. These observations suggest that paraduodenal hernia should be suspected in patients with chronic, atypical
abdominal pain
, regardless of the findings for small bowel obstruction.
...
PMID:Unusual variant of left paraduodenal hernia herniated into the mesocolic fossa leading to jejunal strangulation. 977 41
An 81-year-old man who had under gone two abdominal surgeries and temporary colostomy 30 years previously was admitted due to lower
abdominal pain
and vomiting. An abdominal X-ray film and abdominal CT scan showed intestinal distension and multiple calcareous deposits in the colon.
Gastrografin
enema examination revealed smooth stenosis at the sigmoid colon and many additional defects. Endoscopy could not be performed due to the stenosis. He did not agree to surgery. Seven months later, he was admitted again, due to colonic obstruction. Surgery was performed which revealed colonic obstruction as the source of post-operative stenosis of the sigmoid colon and multiple enteroliths. The stones consisted of a core and a hull and contained ammonium magnesium phosphate.
...
PMID:[A case of colonic obstruction due to post-operative stenosis of the colon and multiple enteroliths]. 1728 14
A 49-year-old premenopausal woman presented with acute onset of lower
abdominal pain
. Physical examination revealed her abdomen was distended and nontender. Her white blood cell count and serum markers for ovarian cancer were normal (alpha-fetoprotein level, 1.6 microg/L; Ca-125 level, 15 U/mL; beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin level < 2 IU/mL). She had no important medical history; in particular, she had no history of malignancy. She denied having any chest symptoms; in particular, she denied experiencing chest pain, cough, or dyspnea. She had stopped smoking at the age of 40 years after having smoked for a total of 20 pack-years. A computed tomographic (CT) examination of the abdomen and pelvis was performed. Helical CT was performed with 150 mL of intravenous contrast material (iohexol, Omnipaque; Amersham Healthcare, Cork, Ireland) and 750 mL of oral contrast material (diatrizoate sodium,
Hypaque
; Amersham Health, Princeton, NJ). CT sections were 5 mm thick and were acquired from the top of the diaphragm through the ischial tuberosities with a rotation time of 13.5 seconds per rotation and use of a LightSpeed 16 CT scanner (GE Medical Systems, Milwaukee, Wis).
...
PMID:Case 116: lymphangioleiomyomatosis. 1758 10
Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy has recently become a feasible option in the management of morbid obesity. One of the most feared complications of this procedure is staple line disruption and leakage. There are, to our knowledge, few literature reports that try to explain the reasons and management of this rare but serious complication. We report a case of staple line disruption that was managed using a T-tube gastrostomy. A 50-year-old female, 2 weeks status post-sleeve gastrectomy in an outside facility, was admitted to the emergency room at Cleveland Clinic Florida with new onset of fever,
abdominal pain
, jaundice, hematemesis, and melena. A computed tomography scan of the abdomen revealed a large extravasation of contrast material parallel to the gastric sleeve. A diagnostic laparoscopy was performed that showed a distal and proximal disruption of the staple line. A T-tube gastrostomy with a large proximal and distal limb was placed into the most distal area of disruption. After thorough over sewing and drainage of the proximal site and T-tube, a feeding jejunostomy was placed. The T-tube permitted to control the leak and to have a controlled fistula. Four weeks postoperatively, the T-tube was removed after the patient had a negative
Gastrografin
study and tolerated oral fluids with a clamped T-tube. The long-term recovery and follow-up were uneventful. T-tube gastrostomy appears to be a safe and feasible treatment option for staple line disruption after vertical sleeve gastrectomy. Early detection and drainage remain the most important principles to manage this type of complication.
...
PMID:T-tube gastrostomy as a novel approach for distal staple line disruption after sleeve gastrectomy for morbid obesity: case report and review of the literature. 1957 73
We present a case of a 58-year-old man who was admitted to our hospital because of
abdominal pain
. He underwent incisional ventral hernia repair with intraabdominal mesh (ePTFE). On the day of admission, physical examination included the discovery of a foreign body in the rectum. There were no signs of acute abdomen. We induced stool, and the mesh came out with it. His further course was uneventful.
Gastrografin
series showed persisting fistula between the small intestine and colon, but without extralumination into the peritoneal cavity. The patient was discharged in good health and without signs of incisional ventral hernia.
...
PMID:Spontaneous mesh evacuation per rectum after incisional ventral hernia repair. 2035 45
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