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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated the efficacy of nasogastric suction for alcohol-related pancreatitis by performing a randomized, controlled study. Twenty-one patients with pancreatitis associated with alcohol ingestion received either nasogastric suction or nothing by mouth in addition to intravenous fluids and meperidine as needed. Twenty patients completed the treatment to which they were assigned. There were no statistically significant differences between the group that received nasogastric suction and the group that did not in duration of
abdominal pain
, anorexia, abdominal tenderness, ileus, presence of abdominal masses, or elevated serum amylase and lipase activities and the ratio of the renal clearance of amylase to
creatinine
; or the number of meperidine injections requested per subject. Patients receiving nasogastric suction complained of significantly longer duration of nausea and vomiting. We conclude that nasogastric suction is not effective in the treatment of uncomplicated alcoholic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:An evaluation of the efficacy of nasogastric suction treatment in alcoholic pancreatitis. 616 98
Amylase activity in serum and urine, and isoamylase, were measured in 300 patients with
abdominal pain
to detect cases of macroamylasemia. Of these patients, 9 had hyperamylasemia and 2 were diagnosed as cases of macroamylasemia on the basis of their amylase/
creatinine
clearance ratio, the gel filtration pattern of their amylase on a dextran column, and results of immunological analysis. Amylase activity in macroamylasemia is reported to show an anomalous response to increase in reaction-temperature. In this report, measurements of the temperature-activity relationships of serum amylase confirmed that the ratio of serum amylase activity at 50 degrees C to that at 25 degrees C (AMY-50 degrees C/AMY-25 degrees C ratio) in patients with macroamylasemia was higher than that in normal subjects or patients with pancreatitis. Moreover, when macromolecular amylase in the sera of patients with macroamylasemia was separated from amylase of normal molecular weight by dextran gel chromatography, it showed a significantly higher AMY-50 degrees C/AMY-25 degrees C ratio than the latter. Measurement of this AMY-50 degrees C/AMY-25 degrees C ratio seems to be a convenient and useful method for differential diagnosis of hyperamylasemia.
...
PMID:A simplified method for detecting macroamylasemia by measuring serum amylase activity at different reaction temperatures. 619 35
Four patients with small residual ovarian carcinoma following treatment with cisplatin, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide have subsequently received 57 courses of ip cisplatin. Cisplatin (120-270 mg in 2 L of Ringer's lactate) was administered via Tenckhoff catheter, with a dwell time of 15-20 mins. Courses were given weekly for 12 weeks, with response documented by laparoscopy or laparotomy prior to and following the trial. With a dwell time of 20 mins, 75% +/- 5% (mean +/- SD) of platinum was recovered. With 120 mg of cisplatin and a dwell time of 20 mins, total plasma platinum peaked at 1.23 +/- 0.42 microgram/ml and by 8 hrs decreased to 0.67 +/- 0.12 microgram/ml. Filterable (non-protein-bound) platinum peaked at 0.73 +/- 0.21 microgram/ml and by 8 hrs fell to 0.03 microgram/ml. Excretion rate paralleled the filterable plasma curve, peaking at 40 mins; 30% +/- 7% of absorbed drug was recovered in urine within 24 hrs. Renal clearance of filterable platinum was 106 +/- 20 ml/min.
Creatinine
clearance was 76 +/- 7 ml/min. Three responses, one complete and two partial, were noted. Zero to two episodes of vomiting occurred in each course. One patient had a
creatinine
clearance decrease to 40 ml/min, one had two episodes of thrombocytopenia, and one had mild
abdominal pain
with a cisplatin dose of greater than or equal to 210 mg. No neurotoxicity, catheter infection, or peritonitis was encountered.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics of Ip cisplatin in refractory ovarian carcinoma. 622 94
The clinical and biochemical data obtained in 85 patients with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) are presented. DKA is an acute exacerbation of diabetes, a characteristic clinico-biochemical syndrome including increasing thirst, polyuria, adynamia, dryness of the skin and mucous membranes, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, occasionally
abdominal pain
, Kussmaul's breath, acetone odour in the exhaled air, circulatory collapse, prerenal azotemia, stupor, coma. Glycemia level exceeds 19 mmol/l, blood pH over 7.3. The disease is marked by neutrophilic leukocytosis, blood count shift to the left, elevated blood content of
creatinine
and urea. It was established that the degree of consciousness abnormality does not always correlate with the degree of the clinico-biochemical manifestations of DKA. During DKA, coma occurs relatively seldom (5.9%). It is suggested to use the term "diabetic ketoacidosis", incipient or marked, indicating the degree of consciousness abnormality (stupor, coma).
...
PMID:[Diabetic ketoacidosis (causes, clinico-biochemical correlations and terminology problems)]. 644 Dec 97
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.
...
PMID:Eclampsia II. Clinical significance of laboratory findings. 707 59
DT, a 63-year-old white male with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and severe peripheral vascular disease, was admitted with a five-day history of vague
abdominal pain
and diarrhea. On the day of admission he vomited three times, was noted to have a bloody stool, and came to the emergency room. DT denied hematemesis, fever, or chills. He had bilateral leg amputations and had sustained three myocardial infarctions, the last one 15 months before this admission. He had never experienced symptoms of abdominal angina. Of significance was his history of congestive heart failure, mitral regurgitation, and atrial fibrillation. His medications on admission included digoxin 0.25mg per day, furosemide 40mg per day, and NPH insulin 15 units per day. On admission to the hospital his oral temperature was 38 degrees C, pulse was 90/min, respiratory rate was 24/min, and blood pressure was 134/80mmHg. Abdominal examination revealed a distended abdomen with hypoactive bowel sounds and mild tenderness. Chest x ray revealed cardiomegaly. The electrocardiogram demonstrated atrial fibrillation. A plain film of the abdomen was positive for gallstones and edema of the bowel wall (thumb-printing). Laboratory results included blood urea nitrogen 48mg%,
creatinine
1.2mg%, hemoglobin 18g/dl, and hematocrit 52.9%. White blood cell count was 11,900 cells/cc with 33% polymorphonuclear leukocytes, 47% bands, 8% lymphocytes, 11% monocytes, and 1% atypical lymphocytes. The prime considerations for differential diagnosis were mesenteric ischemia and infectious gastroenteritis. While it was appreciated that mesenteric ischemia, if present, might warrant surgical intervention, the risk of anesthesia itself in this patient was felt by his attending physicians to exceed 30%. Furthermore, the clinical findings were only "suggestive" of mesenteric eschemia. They were certainly not "diagnostic." In view of this dilemma, a consultation with the Division of Clinical Decision Making was requested.
...
PMID:Abdominal pain, atherosclerosis, and atrial fibrillation. The case for mesenteric ischemia. 716 38
Three nonsplenectomized patients were infected with Babesia microti. One had fever,
abdominal pain
suggesting gallbladder disease, and evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation; another was considered to have lymphoma, partly because two smears for Babesia before admission were negative. All three patients were treated with pentamidine isethionate and improved clinically. Parasites were no longer seen on smears after 5 days of therapy, but Babesia could still be recovered by hamster inoculation 5 weeks after therapy in one of the patients tested, underscoring the need for this test to properly evaluate eradication of the organism. In one patient, pentamidine was stopped after 7 days because of increased
creatinine
concentration, and this amount of drug appeared adequate to control the parasitemia. Pain at drug injection sites was a major side effect in all three patients. Pentamidine appears to be useful in controlling clinical manifestations of babesiosis and decreasing parasitemia, but it does not eradicate the organism.
...
PMID:Response of babesiosis to pentamidine therapy. 719 15
A 6-year-old girl with Turner's syndrome presented with recent onset of proteinuria and pedal edema. There was no history of arthritis, fever, or
abdominal pain
. A physical examination revealed the stigmata of Turner's syndrome, hepatomegaly, and pedal edema. The urine contained 4+ protein without red blood cells or casts, and the BUN and
creatinine
were mildly elevated. The serum lipids were normal. An excretory urogram showed bilaterally enlarged, smooth kidneys without calyceal distortion. Because the proteinuria failed to respond after 1 month of steroid therapy, a diagnostic procedure was performed.
...
PMID:A six-year-old girl with Turner's syndrome and proteinuria. 734 31
A previously well 66-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of severe
abdominal pain
, oliguria, jaundice and hemoglobinuria. At admission, the following values were obtained: red blood cell count 261 x 10(4)/mm3, serum
creatinine
2.8mg/100ml, total bilirubin 8.0mg/ml, indirect bilirubin 5.7mg/100ml, LDH 13886 WU, negative direct and indirect Coomb's test and peripheral blood smear showing schistocytosis. She was diagnosed as hemolytic uremic syndrome and was successfully treated with plasma infusion, plasma exchange and hemodialysis. The results of the tests for verotoxin titer of E. coli O157: H7 and circulating anticoagulant were positive. The test result for anticoagulant eventually became negative during her clinical course. In this case, circulating anticoagulant might have contributed to the pathogenesis of hemolytic uremic syndrome.
...
PMID:[A case of hemolytic uremic syndrome associated with circulating anticoagulant]. 747 20
The hyperimmunoglobulinaemia D and periodic fever (hyper-IgD) syndrome is typified by recurrent unpredictable febrile attacks with
abdominal pain
, joint involvement (arthralgias/arthritis), headache, skin lesions and a polyclonal elevation of serum IgD (> 100 U mL-1). Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) is a major proinflammatory cytokine which could play a role in the pathogenesis of the attacks. There is a need for parameters (if possible non-invasive) to monitor disease activity. A potential candidate is neopterin which is released by monocytes/macrophages when stimulated with IFN-gamma, excreted unchanged in urine, and appears to be an early and sensitive marker for activation of the immune system. We measured rectal body temperature, serum IFN-gamma, and urine neopterin in 10 hyper-IgD patients both during and between attacks. The body temperature rose to a mean of 38.9 degrees C on the first day of the attack and normalized within 5 days. Serum IFN-gamma during the first day of the attack was 2.98 IU mL-1 and was significantly lower during remissions. The urine neopterin excretion was 268 +/- 170 mumol mol-1
creatinine
between attacks and was significantly increased to 638 +/- 275 mumol mol-1
creatinine
on the first day of symptoms. Maximal urine neopterin values were reached on the fourth day of the attack (1051 +/- 387 mumol mol-1
creatinine
) and excretion gradually declined and attained values below 400 mumol mol-1
creatinine
after 9 days. There was a good correlation between serum IFN-gamma and urine neopterin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Interferon-gamma and urine neopterin in attacks of the hyperimmunoglobulinaemia D and periodic fever syndrome. 749 43
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