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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) (CDC group IV) were investigated for biliary disease because of the presence of both severe upper
abdominal pain
and raised levels of serum
alkaline phosphatase
. None was clinically jaundiced. Upper abdominal ultrasound was abnormal in three. All had endoscopic retrograde cholangiographic evidence of both an intrahepatic sclerosing cholangitis suggestive of primary sclerosing cholangitis and an irregular suprapapillary common bile duct dilation suggestive of papillary stenosis. Three had evidence of gastrointestinal cryptosporidiosis and two of disseminated cytomegalovirus infection. Endoscopic sphincterotomy, performed in two patients, gave good pain relief. We propose the name 'AIDS sclerosing cholangitis' for this form of secondary cholangitis. The cause of this disorder remains unclear. Recent evidence is discussed which suggests that it is not due to HIV itself but to an opportunistic infection. Cryptosporidium appears to be the most likely candidate.
...
PMID:Sclerosing cholangitis in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Case reports and review of the literature. 307 60
Local hepatic tuberculosis is an unusual form of extrapulmonary tuberculosis. The authors describe the case of a 39-year-old woman with this disease who posed diagnostic difficulties. She presented with
abdominal pain
, minimal constitutional symptoms, hepatomegaly and radiologic findings of a focal hepatic lesion. Laparotomy was required for diagnosis. A literature review revealed that most individuals with local hepatic tuberculosis have fever, night sweats and weight loss. Hepatomegaly is often the only abnormal physical sign. Minimally elevated serum bilirubin and
alkaline phosphatase
levels are common. Ultrasonography and computerized tomography will demonstrate a lobulated, hypoechoic liver mass. Definitive diagnosis requires demonstration of acid-fast bacilli in biopsy material obtained by percutaneous techniques or at laparotomy. Cultures of the diseased liver are usually negative. Antituberculous drug therapy appears to be the preferred method of treatment.
...
PMID:Local hepatic tuberculosis, the cause of a painful hepatic mass: case report and review of the literature. 309 51
A 56-year-old female patient on verapamil for hypertension experienced two episodes of jaundice, pruritus and upper
abdominal pain
with transaminase elevated up to six-fold and
alkaline phosphatase
up to four-fold when inadvertently re-challenged with the drug. Liver biopsy showed marked cholestasis. Verapamil can occasionally cause mixed cytotoxic-cholestatic liver injury.
...
PMID:Liver injury due to verapamil. 318 62
Obstructive jaundice due to benign, nonparasitic hepatic cysts is rare, with only 11 previously reported cases. We report a case in which relief of jaundice was obtained by percutaneous cyst aspiration. For the elderly, infirm, or high-risk patient, percutaneous aspiration is recommended to relieve obstructive jaundice. Immense size and porta hepatis proximity are major risk factors for developing jaundice from simple hepatic cysts.
Abdominal pain
of recent onset and rising
alkaline phosphatase
are warning signs that this complication is developing. In these situations, treatment prior to developing jaundice is recommended.
...
PMID:Obstructive jaundice from benign, nonparasitic hepatic cysts: identification of risk factors and percutaneous aspiration for diagnosis and treatment. 327 52
Focal hepatosplenic candidiasis has been recognized with increasing frequency in recent years. We reviewed the cases of eight patients seen between 1982 and 1985, and information on 60 patients whose cases have been reported in the world literature. The characteristics of focal hepatosplenic candidiasis include persistent fever in a neutropenic patient whose leukocyte count is returning to normal, often coupled with
abdominal pain
; an elevated
alkaline phosphatase
level; and less commonly, rebound leukocytosis. The characteristic "bull's eye" lesions seen with hepatic ultrasound examination or computed tomography generally are not detectable until neutrophil recovery has occurred. Diagnosis can be established only by biopsy evidence of yeasts or pseudohyphae in the granulomatous lesions. Cultures are frequently negative, however, especially in patients who have been pretreated with antifungal agents. We review the evolving nature of hepatosplenic candidiasis, focusing on diagnosis and treatment.
...
PMID:Hepatic candidiasis in cancer patients: the evolving picture of the syndrome. 327 68
The development of bilateral parapelvic hemorrhagic pseudocysts with
abdominal pain
, systemic symptoms of malaise and fever, elevation of erythrocyte sedimentation rate and serum
alkaline phosphatase
, and decreased renal function is described in a patient taking anticoagulants. The symptoms and signs resolved with the resolution of the hemorrhagic pseudocysts. The bilaterality and selective localization of these hemorrhages suggest the existence of a specific pathogenesis. The advent of new imaging techniques in the last decade allows for a diagnosis and a better understanding of the pathologic processes that affect the renal sinus.
...
PMID:Bilateral hemorrhagic parapelvic pseudocysts. 335 71
Twenty-four cases of pyogenic liver abscess admitted between 1977 and 1986 are presented. A mean age of 43 years (range 5-78) with a 3:1 male:female ratio and 25% mortality were noted. Fever and
abdominal pain
were encountered in over 80% of cases and anorexia and malaise in over 60%. Hepatomegaly and right upper quadrant tenderness were the commonest signs. Leucocytosis, raised
alkaline phosphatase
and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, and hypoalbuminaemia were each noted in roughly 80% of cases. None of these showed any prognostic significance. Predisposing factors were noted in 11 cases. No cases of associated biliary disease were noted. Multiple, polymicrobial, aerobic and mixed aerobic/anaerobic abscesses were associated with a higher mortality. Patients aged over 50 years or more also had a higher mortality (P less than 0.05). Anaerobic abscesses were often solitary and were associated with a lower mortality (P less than 0.05). Surgical drainage and guided percutaneous drainage showed no difference in morbidity.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of pyogenic liver abscess: the University Hospital of the West Indies experience. 337 58
Chlamydia trachomatis was isolated from liver biopsy specimens on two separate occasions in a young, sexually inactive patient with a 10 month history of recurrent episodes of fever, chills, and
abdominal pain
. Liver function tests showed a five fold increase in
alkaline phosphatase
, and a 20 fold increase in 5'-nucleotidase. Liver histology changes consisted of mild inflammatory infiltrates in the portal tracts. Treatment with doxycycline was followed by complete recovery. We are not aware of any previous report describing isolation of this organism from the liver parenchyma, or of C trachomatis infection presenting as fever of obscure origin.
...
PMID:Isolation of Chlamydia trachomatis from the liver of a patient with prolonged fever. 342 79
Primary bile duct carcinoma is a malignancy with a poor prognosis, but recent diagnostic developments allow earlier detection and possibly improved chances for effective palliation or surgical cure. In order to increase the clinical understanding and awareness of this disorder, 43 patients with primary adenocarcinoma of the bile ducts were reviewed. The mean patient age was 63, and symptoms of nausea,
abdominal pain
, and pruritus were reported in a majority of patients. Documented weight loss, alcoholic stools, cutaneous icterus, and hepatomegaly were each present in a majority of patients. Serum bilirubin and
alkaline phosphatase
determinations were abnormal in 40 of 43 patients (93%), and cholangiography was the diagnostic study providing the most discriminating information. Locally invasive disease and biliary obstruction was the major cause of morbidity and mortality, and there was only one surgical cure. These data suggest that cholangiography and nonsurgical techniques for biliary drainage should be employed in most patients who are not optimal surgical candidates.
...
PMID:Primary adenocarcinoma of the bile ducts. Clinical characteristics and natural history. 352 44
Spontaneous transpapillary stone passage was found in 16 of 84 cases with sonographically detected common bile duct stones. Stone passage was confirmed by ultrasound and retrograde endoscopic cholangiography (ERC) as well as by intraoperative cholangiography and also by clinical observation. Sonographic diagnosis was demonstrated by incontestably safe documentation. 15 of 16 patients with transpapillary stone passage had right upper
abdominal pain
, three patients an attack of acute pancreatitis, whereas in 5 cases hyperamylasaemia was found. Decreasing levels of bilirubin ,
alkaline phosphatase
and gamma-GT are of minor value in diagnosing a stone passage. Despite a new and more successful sonographic technique in detecting common bile duct stones, ERC remains the standard diagnostic procedure.
...
PMID:[Sonographic detection and clinical studies in the spontaneous passage of bile duct calculi]. 352 80
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