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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A series of 64 women complaining of severe constipation is described, in each of whom delayed elimination of markers from the colon was demonstrated but a barium enema was normal. All completed a detailed questionnaire and the responses are compared with those obtained in an age-matched series of healthy women with no bowel complaint. In each group 40 women also recorded in a manner suitable for analysis all food eaten over a period of seven days. The patients passed about one stool weekly with the aid of laxatives, and were greatly troubled by
abdominal pain
, bloating, malaise and nausea, to the extent that the symptoms were a major social disability and many lost time from work. Decreased bowel frequency and other symptoms were often first noticed around the age of puberty and slowly became worse until they were severe by the third decade. In a few, the symptoms began suddenly after an abdominal operation c-accident. Comparison with the control group showed no evidence that the patients had been underweight at any time or that they took less fibre; treatment with a bran supplement did not usually help them. The patients experienced rectal sensation before defaecation less often than the control subjects and they used digital pressure to assist defaecation more frequently. The women with constipation tended to have more painful and irregular menstrual periods, and there was an increased incidence of ovarian cystectomy and hysterectomy. Hesitancy in starting to pass urine was more common, as were some somatic symptoms such as cold hands or blackouts. Attention is drawn to this distinctive combination in young women of slow total
gut
transit time and a colon of normal width on barium enema, associated with abdominal, anorectal, gynaecological and somatic symptoms, as a disorder which can be disabling and particularly difficult to treat.
...
PMID:Severe chronic constipation of young women: 'idiopathic slow transit constipation'. 394 36
Pressure activity in the stomach and upper intestine was studied in 104 patients referred to the Mayo Clinic for evaluation of functional symptoms (nausea, vomiting, upper
abdominal pain
, or other dyspeptic symptoms in the absence of structural
gut
abnormalities). Manometric abnormalities were found in 75 patients. Forty-three of these had gastric abnormalities and 32 patients had both gastric and intestinal abnormalities. In the stomach, decreased antral phasic pressure activity after a solid meal was the most common abnormality. In the upper intestine, unpropagated bursts of phasic and tonic contractile activity were a relatively frequent abnormality but a number of other altered manometric patterns also were observed. Digestive tract symptoms were not good predictors of the presence or site of the gastrointestinal manometric abnormalities. Patients with associated neurologic, urologic, or metabolic (diabetes) disease were more likely to exhibit manometric abnormalities than were those without evidence of disease outside the
gut
. Almost two-thirds of the patients with symptoms and normal manometry presented features suggestive of psychiatric disease. We conclude that in patients with severe functional-type symptoms gastrointestinal manometry is a useful technique to evidence the underlying
gut
motor disturbance that is present in a relatively high proportion of these patients.
...
PMID:Manometric evaluation of functional upper gut symptoms. 397 47
2 cases of midgut infarction in patients taking oral contraceptives are reported. Case 1 was a 38-year-old married woman with 3 children. After 2 isolated bouts of severe
abdominal pain
and diarrhea, examination revealed only minimal epigastric and left loin tenderness. Blood counts were normal. Other tests were negative. She had been taking cyclical tablets of 2.5 mg norethynodrel and .1 mg mestranol (Con ovid-E) for 48 months and continued after 8 days in the hospital. 18 weeks later severe
abdominal pain
, vomiting, and diarrhea occurred with abdominal tenderness and rigidity. The white-cell count was 25,000 with 85-90% segmented forms. Other blood tests were normal. At operation the superior mesenteric artery was found to be occluded distal to the origin of the middle colic artery. The thrombus was removed and the circulation to the
gut
seemed adequate. Intravenous heparin was given. Reoperation at 12 and again at 36 hours revealed viable intestine. 8 days after hospital admission ileus symptoms occurred. Reoperation revealed gangrene of almost all of the small intestine and part of the large intestine. The patient died 3 days later. Autopsy showed thrombosis of the superior mesenteric artery which was apparently not associated with local atheroma. Minimal atheroma in the aorta and an infarct of the spleen were noted. Case 2 was a 45-year-old married woman with 2 children who complained of severe
abdominal pain
and vomiting of 8 hours duration. A similar attack 1 week earlier had subsided in 6 hours. She had been taking tablets of 5 mg ethinyl-esternol (lynestrenol) and .15 mg mestranol (Noracyclin) for 11 months. There was no fever. The white-cell count was 19,500 with 85% segmented forms. Other laboratory tests and X-ray were normal. A loud bruit was heard over the upper abdomen. Bowel sounds were hyperactive. A diagnosis of acute small-bowel obstruction was made. At operation a definite diagnosis could not be made. Symptoms became worse. Reoperation 10 days later revealed gangrenous small intestine and part of the large intestine. The gangrenous parts were removed. After a complicated convalescence the patient recovered, but has moderate steatorrhea. Histologic examination of the resected intestine showed no evidence of atheroma in the mesenteric vessels. Considering these 2 cases with premonitory warning symptoms and without evidence of an atheromatous cause but associated with oral contraceptive therapy the immediate discontinuance of such therapy in women who develop acute abdominal pain is irecommended.
...
PMID:Infarction of the midgut associated with oral contraceptives. Report of two cases. 568 97
Campylobacter jejuni has recently been recognized as an important cause of human gastroenteritis in many countries. The clinical features of C. jejuni infections vary from those of a mild gastroenteritis to a severe enterocolitis. The most common symptoms of the disease are fever,
abdominal pain
and bloody diarrhoea. The small intestine is the main site of infection, but the colon may also be involved. The main pathogenesis of C. jejuni appears to be invasion of the wall of the
gut
as in salmonellosis. Isolation of the organism from faeces requires culture in a selective medium containing antibiotics and incubation under reduced oxygen tension at 42 degrees C. Most cases of campylobacter enteritis are sporadic and it is often difficult to confirm their source. Although cross infection between humans occurs rarely, the disease is mainly a zoonosis with many possible routes of infection. Human infections have been associated with the consumption of contaminated food, especially poultry, unpasteurized milk, and water, as well as contact with domestic animals such as dogs and cats. In most cases campylobacter enteritis is a selflimiting disease and therefore decision on treatment should be taken on clinical grounds. When considered necessary, erythromycin is the drug of choice. Information about C. jejuni infection has accumulated rapidly in recent years, but much remains to be learned, especially about its epidemiology.
...
PMID:Campylobacter jejuni enteritis; a review. 639 Aug 86
We have investigated the use of 111Indium granulocyte scanning, which would be expected to identify areas of perivascular or generalized neutrophil infiltration, in patients with collagen-vascular diseases suffering from either gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhea or
abdominal pain
in 15 patients) or otherwise unexplained fever (six patients). Among patients with gastrointestinal symptoms, seven of 15 had positive scans suggesting large or small bowel involvement--three of three patients with Behcet's syndrome, four of five with vasculitis, no patient in six with systemic lupus erythematosus, and no patient with Churg-Strauss syndrome. Among patients without gastrointestinal symptoms, only one patient with polyarteritis nodosa had a positive scan, showing both large and small intestinal involvement. White cell scanning offers a noninvasive, readily tolerated technique for identifying inflammatory involvement of the intestine in patients with collagen-vascular disorders. Gastrointestinal involvement is rare in the absence of symptoms; and among symptomatic patients, inflammatory involvement of the
gut
is more likely to be found in patients with vasculitis or Behcet's.
...
PMID:Noninvasive investigation of the gastrointestinal tract in collagen-vascular disease. 650 10
Systemic vasculitis is known to affect the gastrointestinal tract but the nature of the complication is poorly characterized. Out of 65 patients with systemic vasculitis, the majority of whom had renal disease, the intestine was found to be affected in 18. These comprised four of eight patients with polyarteritis nodosa, nine of seventeen with microscopic polyarteritis, four of thirty-six with Wegener's granulomatosis and one of four with Churg-Strauss syndrome. The features included
abdominal pain
(85 per cent), diarrhoea (50 per cent),
gut
haemorrhage (44 per cent) and abnormal liver function tests (50 per cent). Manifestations of gastrointestinal disease were evident at presentation in half the patients and led to a fetal outcome in five. Ileus, mucosal abnormalities, perforation and slow transit were evident radiographically, and selective visceral angiography showed aneurysms or organ infarcts in five patients. Histological assessment of
gut
biopsies (chiefly rectal) revealed non-specific inflammation or ulceration in nine patients and intramucosal haemorrhage in two. Focal areas of necrosis and ulceration in colonoscopic biopsies were highly suggestive of vasculitis whereas arteritis was only found in one full thickness biopsy. Hence the diagnosis of gastrointestinal complications depends largely on clinical evidence. In patients who survived, the gastrointestinal features remitted as the systemic illness improved following treatment with steroids, cyclophosphamide or plasma exchange.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal manifestations of systemic vasculitis. 660 92
Clinico-pathological case report of a 11 year-old girl who successively presented persistent
abdominal pain
, pneumoperitoneum, repeated intestinal hemorrhages, superficial intestinal ulcerations, first localized on the jejunum and later extended to the all
gut
. After a course of 13 months, the child died from diffuse and repeated hemorrhages. The morphologic studies revealed a diffuse and homogeneous cellular infiltrate made of large round "lymphomatous" cells scattered within the lamina propria and submucosa. Initially this superficial cellular infiltrate was overshadowed by accompanying inflammatory cells and was not recognized as a tumoral process. Later on the dissemination of abnormal cells to the entire ileon, mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen and liver and the cellular appearance confirmed its neoplastic nature and allowed to consider this process as a malignant histiocytosis of the intestine as described by Isaacson and Wright. This case seems to be the first case reported in childhood.
...
PMID:[Malignant histiocytosis of the intestine. An anatomo-clinical case report]. 660 34
Sixteen patients with bronchopulmonary infection received 500 mg erythromycin lactobionate by intravenous infusion every 8 h for 2 days. The duration of infusion was either 30 (8 patients) or 60 min (8 patients). An inline filterset (0.22 micrometer) was included in the intravenous administration set in 4 patients of each infusion group. Serum erythromycin levels were obtained before and at various times for 8 h after the first and fourth doses and before and immediately after the other doses. The incidence and severity of venous irritation and gastrointestinal side-effects were assessed. Mean (S.D.) peak erythromycin levels for the 30 min infusion were 26.31 (6.89) micrograms/ml (first dose) and 26.85 (6.11) micrograms/ml (fourth dose) and for the 60 min infusions, 23.96 (7.91) micrograms/ml (first dose) and 23.65 (6.55) micrograms/ml (fourth dose). Venous irritation was experienced by 12 patients, ranging from localized discomfort to thrombophlebitis, but the severity was significantly reduced by inline filtration (P less than 0.005). Gastrointestinal side-effects were reported by 8 patients and 1 patient withdrew because of severe
abdominal pain
and nausea. These symptoms were usually relieved by spasmolytic agents and possibly could be explained by high concentrations reaching the
gut
wall either by biliary excretion or direct transport from blood and stimulating smooth muscle motility.
...
PMID:Study of serum levels, venous irritation and gastrointestinal side-effects with intravenous erythromycin lactobionate in patients with bronchopulmonary infection. 664 16
A radiotelemetric system using dual pressure pills was used to record the jejunal motility in man. Prolonged recordings were made under relatively physiological conditions. Six patients with functional
abdominal pain
and six age/sex matched normal subjects were studied. Motility patterns varied markedly both within and between subjects. No differences were detected between the two groups. In particular, the occurrence of characteristic pain in the patients bore no relation to the recorded motor activity. The wide range of jejunal motility patterns in normal subjects needs to be appreciated before conclusions can be drawn about possible abnormalities in
gut
diseases or disorders.
...
PMID:Jejunal motility in patients with functional abdominal pain. 670 16
The distribution and referral of
abdominal pain
in 21 patients with functional
abdominal pain
were investigated by performing balloon distension of the ileum, proximal jejunum, second part of the duodenum, and distal oesophagus. Pain was perceived not just in classically described sites but throughout the abdomen and was referred to several unusual extra-abdominal sites. The presenting pain was reproduced by this technique in 14 patients, in three of whom it was also reproduced by colonoscopic distension. This study emphasises the protean presentation of functional
abdominal pain
and demonstrates the existence of potentially tender "trigger" areas for the production of
abdominal pain
in the proximal as well as the distal
gut
.
...
PMID:Functional abdominal pain: further evidence that whole gut is affected. 680 49
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