Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 59-year-old woman who had undergone a Whipple's operation for carcinoma of the head of the pancreas, developed septic fever of up to 40 degrees C on the fourth postoperative day, accompanied by severe upper abdominal pain and local guarding on palpation over the liver. Her general condition markedly and quickly deteriorated. Liver abscess was suspected. Computed tomography demonstrated a hypodense, wedge-shaped lesion in the right lobe of the liver without any abscess capsule. Liver infarction was diagnosed when injection of contrast medium failed to show any increase in density. Magnetic resonance imaging confirmed the wedge-shaped signal-rich lesion. Laboratory tests revealed a leucocytosis of 30,000/microliters, a postoperative rise in serum alkaline phosphatase activity (up to 800 U/l), gamma-glutamyl transaminase (up to 190 U/l) and lactate dehydrogenase (up to 320 U/l), while GOT and GPT activities remained within normal limits throughout. Fever subsided within 3 weeks. --It is stressed that, if a patient's condition worsens after a major abdominal operation, liver infarction should be considered in the differential diagnosis. Modern imaging methods have increased the frequency of this diagnosis. They, together with the clinical picture and the pattern of biochemical tests, make it possible to distinguish reliably infarction from liver abscess.
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PMID:[Liver infarction after Whipple's surgery. Diagnosis based on clinical course and imaging procedures]. 134 77

We report the diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic features of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in eight patients in whom the disease was seen as a primary tumor of the liver. This series illustrates the variety of situations in which lymphoma might be diagnosed: (a) abdominal pain and hepatomegaly (three cases), (b) incidental finding at evaluation of a patient with cirrhosis (two cases), (c) secondary neoplasm after treatment for Hodgkin's disease (one case) and (d) complication of AIDS (two cases). In most cases, clinical and/or radiological features were nonspecific. However, the combination of the following features must be considered as suggestive: occurrence of an apparently primary hepatic tumor in an immunocompromised patient, absence of the usual serum tumor markers and increased serum lactic dehydrogenase activity. The final diagnosis was based on histological examination of specimens obtained by ultrasonically guided liver biopsies or at surgery. All cases belonged to unfavorable histological subtypes. Immunohistochemical findings on paraffin-embedded sections demonstrated the B-lymphocyte lineage of the seven tumors available for study. In the three patients without coexisting disease, complete remission was obtained by surgery alone or combined with chemotherapy. In the two patients with coexisting cirrhosis, outcome was rapidly unfavorable, with death occurring less than 3 mo after diagnosis. Among the three immunocompromised patients, two experienced a rapid unfavorable outcome, and the remaining one was in complete remission after surgery and chemotherapy. In conclusion, primary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the liver arising in patients without coexisting disease has a slow progression and might be successfully treated by surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma presenting as a primary tumor of the liver: presentation, diagnosis and outcome in eight patients. 202 91

A 51-year-old female complained of right upper abdominal pain. Non-functioning adrenal carcinoma was suspected from the laboratory data of elevated lactate dehydrogenase level and total amount of urinary excretion of 17-ketosteroid. To deny the possibility of other diseases, such as retroperitoneal sarcoma, a percutaneous needle biopsy of the tumor was carried out. As the pathological diagnosis was adrenal carcinoma, pre-operative chemotherapy consisting of cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum (CDDP), adriamycin, 5-fluorouracil, cyclophosphamide and o,p'-DDD was carried out twice. The tumor size decreased after chemotherapy, and we could operate on the patient safely and relatively easily. Almost all of the tumor was replaced by a necrotic mass. However, cancer cells still remained in the peripheral lesion of the tumor, and the pathological diagnosis was the same as that of biopsy specimen. Although chemotherapy of adrenal carcinoma has not been established yet, we believe from the experience of this case that this disease should be treated by chemotherapy including CDDP.
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PMID:[A case report of non-functioning adrenal carcinoma diagnosed by percutaneous needle biopsy and which responded to preoperative chemotherapy]. 324 26

Six cases of mesenteric venous thrombosis have occurred in the metropolitan area from 1982 through 1985. The most common findings were nonspecific abdominal pain associated with nausea and vomiting, subjective distress disproportionate to the objective findings, and signs of decreased intravascular fluid volume. In all six cases there was a rapid progression of physical findings to a level commensurate with the initial complaint. The most consistent laboratory abnormalities were an increase in leukocyte precursors, an elevated lactate dehydrogenase, and a mild metabolic acidosis. Mesenteric venous thrombosis is an unusual disease that is difficult to diagnose and manage.
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PMID:Mesenteric venous thrombosis. 334 49

A case of hepatic leiomyosarcoma is reported and the literature on smooth muscle tumors of the liver is reviewed. All 15 patients with hepatic leiomyosarcoma presented initially with hepatic or abdominal mass. About half of these patients also had abdominal pain or weight loss or both. Elevated levels of serum alkaline phosphatase, SGOT, and lactic dehydrogenase were frequent but inconsistent findings. The prognoses appeared grave, but potentially curable. All but four patients died in less than 3 years. One patient was not followed. The three patients who were alive in follow-ups survived 8 months, 1 year, and 6.5 years, respectively, with no evidence of disease. All three surviving patients had resectable tumor and were surgically treated.
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PMID:Hepatic leiomyosarcoma. 636 91

Two cases of lightning injury which occurred while mountain climbing and took different clinical courses are reported. One case with lightning marks on the abdomen was treated as a crush injury because of myoglobinuria and elevation of serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, lactic dehydrogenase and creatine phosphokinase. The other case had lightning burns and complained of abdominal pain. He was treated with fluid transfusion resulting from superficial and deep dermal burns estimated at 55 per cent of the body surface and received a skin graft. The subsequent three-year follow-up has revealed no residual deformity in either case.
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PMID:Lightning injury: report of two cases. 664 Mar 85

We describe the clinico-pathological characteristics of hepatic injury associated with the toxic-epidemic syndrome caused by the consumption of adulterated rapeseed oil. Of 842 toxic-epidemic syndrome patients admitted to our hospital between May, 1981, and January, 1982, 24.1% showed signs of liver involvement which was more frequent in women and in the fourth decade of life. No statistical significance was found in relation to alcohol consumption, treatment with potentially hepatotoxic antibiotics, or adult respiratory distress syndrome. Most (91.6%) patients with hepatic injury were asymptomatic; jaundice or abdominal pain was rarely noted. One patient died of acute liver failure following Budd-Chiari syndrome. Serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity was raised in all cases, alkaline phosphatase in 94.6%, and less frequently lactate dehydrogenase (80%), SGPT (84.7%), and SGOT (76%). Serum total bilirubin was usually normal (89.2%). The histologic lesion was similar to drug-induced cholestatic hepatitis. Lamellar inclusions, canalicular injury, giant mitochondria, and hyperplasia of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum were seen by electron microscopy. Ultrastructural signs of cholestasis were common (78.9%). The pathogenesis of this lesion is unknown; however, because of similarities with chlorpromazine-induced cholestatic hepatitis, we suggest that a combination of hypersensitivity and intrinsic hepatoxicity is a possible mechanism.
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PMID:Hepatic injury in the toxic epidemic syndrome caused by ingestion of adulterated cooking oil (Spain, 1981). 669 64

Sixty-seven cases of eclampsia were managed between August 1977 and July 1980. Routinely acquired laboratory tests of these cases have been analyzed. In addition, the group of patients with eclampsia was compared with a group of 24 healthy pregnant women. There was no significant difference in platelet count, serum fibrinogen, and bilirubin values. The activated partial thromboplastin time was abnormal in 42% of patients with eclampsia. There was no clinical evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation in any patient. Patients with eclampsia had abnormalities of lactic dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, SGOT, uric acid, BUN, and creatinine. However, in any individual patients there was no single test of great clinical usefulness and no test predictive of maternal or fetal outcome. At present the authors recommend complete blood count (including blood smear and platelet count), clot observation, and serum creatinine tests. Liver function tests are reserved for the patient with upper abdominal pain. Additional tests are recommended if the diagnosis of eclampsia is questionable or if an additional disease process is suspected.
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PMID:Eclampsia II. Clinical significance of laboratory findings. 707 59

We reviewed the records of 73 patients with primary melanoma of the choroid and ciliary body with metastasis treated at M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute between 1973 and 1979. At time of diagnosis of primary melanoma 71 of 73 patients had tumor localized to the eye and were treated with enucleation of the affected eye. The interval from resection of primary tumor to detection of systemic metastases in the 71 patients ranged from one to 201 months (median 43.5 months). Weight loss and abdominal pain due to hepatomegaly were the most common symptoms, and hepatomegaly was the most common physical sign. The liver was the most common site of tumor recurrence, occurring in 44 of 71 patients. Among liver enzymes, serum lactic dehydrogenase was found to be the most sensitive indicator of liver metastasis and was elevated in 96% of patients with tumor in the liver. Liver involvement with tumor was associated with poor response to chemotherapy and significantly poorer survival than involvement of other extracranial sites. The survival duration from time of development of systemic metastasis ranged between one and 31 months (median seven months), with a one-year survival rate of 29%. The median survival of patients from diagnosis of ocular melanoma was 52 months, with a five-year survival rate of 43%.
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PMID:Prognosis in metastatic choroidal melanoma. 724 14

During an outbreak of measles in the period from May 1993 through February 1994, a 23-year-old woman with measles was admitted because of abdominal pain and vomiting. Moderately elevated levels of serum and urinary amylase were found. We investigated prospectively the next nine consecutive young adults hospitalized with severe measles. Pancreatic and other organ involvement was determined by serum and urinary amylase, serum lipase, and additional appropriate biochemical and hematological data. Four patients had elevated amylase levels in both serum and urine, whereas in one, serum amylase alone was increased. Serum lipase determined in eight patients was elevated in seven. In all patients elevated serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase or lactate dehydrogenase were found. In seven patients serum calcium concentrations were below the lower limit of normal. Four patients had mild to moderate thrombocytopenia. This is the first detailed report of pancreatic involvement in young adults with measles. This abnormal finding, its possible underlying mechanisms, and the clinical significance are discussed.
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PMID:Pancreatic enzyme elevation in measles. 753 76


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