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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The medical records of all patients ages 0 to 21 years who underwent proctosigmoidoscopy and/or rectal biopsy over a 27 month period of time were reviewed to determine the efficacy and safety of these procedures in pediatric patients. One hundred twenty-one patients underwent proctosigmoidoscopy; 91 of these also had rectal biopsies. Median age was two years; 21% were less than six months and 8% less than one month of age. Depth of examination was 10 to 15 cm in most patients greater than 10 years of age. Induced friability was the most frequently observed mucosal abnormality. Abnormal findings were almost always present in patients with bloody diarrhea and were quite common in those with rectal bleeding, but less common in those with chronic diarrhea and
abdominal pain
. Colitis of various causes was the most common cause of blood in the stool; anal fissures were found in only four of 23 patients with rectal bleeding. Both proctosigmoidoscopy and rectal biopsy were needed to exclude the presence of colitis. Mobidity was 0% with proctosigmoidoscopy and 0.34% with rectal suction biopsy.
J Pediatr 1976
Dec
PMID:Proctosigmoidoscopy and rectal biopsy in infants and children. 108 95
A case of pancreatic ascites is reported and compared with 55 previously reported cases. A 42-year-old black male chronic alcoholic presenting with
abdominal pain
was found at operation to have chronic pancreatitis with no pseudocyst formation or overt duct disruption, in contrast to the majority of cases reported. The diagnosis and differentiation from cirrhosis of the liver were based on the operative findings, elevated serum amylase level, ascitic fluid amylase value, and protein content. Surgical exploration alone has proven beneficial--the patient has done well in the past 2 years with no recurrence of the ascites and continued weight gain. The clinical course was compatible with pancreatitis although the radiographic and angiographic studies were not diagnostic. It is suggested that the clinical entity of pancreatic ascites occurs more often than reported and a workup for it should be done even in the face of unconvincing radiographic and angiographic evidence.
Am J Dig Dis 1975
Dec
PMID:Pancreatic ascites. A case report and review of the literature. 120 11
A 74-year old woman with
abdominal pain
and edema was diagnosed to have Menetrier's disease on surgical full thickness gastric wall biopsy. Two months later, she complained of increasing severe
abdominal pain
radiating to the back, unusual in Menetrier's. Work-up showed classic Menetrier's disease with large gastric folds, achlorhydria, gastrointestinal protein loss and hypoalbuminemia. A celiac arteriogram, however, suggested a pancreatic neoplasm and adenocarcinoma of the body of the pancreas was confirmed at laparotomy. This is the first report of the concurrence of these two diseases. The difficulty of differentiating Menetrier's from occult gastrointestinal cancer is discussed.
Am J Gastroenterol 1975
Dec
PMID:Menetrier's disease and adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. 122 31
A prospective study was performed with 25 patients with ectopic pregnancies (EPs) who underwent treatment with transvaginal administration of methotrexate. Nineteen patients (76%) had positive responses to this treatment, and six (24%) had to undergo surgery: five because of increasing
abdominal pain
and one because of vaginal bleeding. The ultrasonographic (US) resolution of the EP was long and lagged behind the resolution at testing of levels of beta subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-hCG) in all patients. The fallopian tube in 12 (63%) of the responding group initially increased in diameter from a mean of 2.22 cm to a mean of 3.84 cm. In 13 (68%) of the responding group, it became more vascular at color Doppler examination. Eleven (92%) of the 12 EPs that increased in size also became more vascular. The increase in tubal size and vascularity, in spite of the falling beta-hCG level, represents a healing process and should cause no concern about the follow-up of these patients.
Radiology 1992
Dec
PMID:Ectopic pregnancy: evolution after treatment with transvaginal methotrexate. 127 40
To determine whether the lipase:amylase ratio differentiates alcoholic from nonalcoholic pancreatitis, we conducted a retrospective review of charts with the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis at the George Washington University Medical Center between January 1988 and July 1990. A total of 446 charts were reviewed. For a patient to be included in the subsequent analysis, the following criteria were met: 1) the patient had typical symptoms of pancreatitis, 2) serum amylase and lipase were analyzed on admission, and 3) a computerized tomographic (CT) scan or ultrasound of the abdomen was obtained within 72 h of admission. Forty-seven charts satisfied the requirements for inclusion in the study. Data collected from the charts included history of alcohol consumption, age, sex, race, admission serum amylase and serum lipase (from this the amylase:lipase ratio was calculated), peak serum amylase and serum lipase, and number of days of
abdominal pain
before admission. Patients with alcoholic pancreatitis had significantly lower serum amylase levels and significantly higher lipase:amylase ratios than those with nonalcoholic pancreatitis (p < 0.01). There was no difference in the serum lipase between the groups. The higher the lipase:amylase ratio, the greater the specificity of alcohol as the etiology of acute pancreatitis. Only patients with alcoholic acute pancreatitis had lipase:amylase ratios > 5.0 (sensitivity 31%, specificity 100%). Our data point to the clinical utility of the lipase:amylase ratio in differentiating alcoholic from nonalcoholic acute pancreatitis. Prospective studies will be needed to confirm the clinical utility of this ratio.
Am J Gastroenterol 1992
Dec
PMID:The admission serum lipase:amylase ratio differentiates alcoholic from nonalcoholic acute pancreatitis. 128 Apr 5
Between 1 January 1988 and 31 December 1989, 525 patients were admitted to one hospital with a diagnosis of acute abdominal pain. Of these, 182 (34.7%) underwent an emergency operation and 14 (7.7%) of these patients subsequently died within 30 days. Death was due to intestinal obstruction in 69%, and there was a 28% mortality rate for emergency colonic resection. Non-specific
abdominal pain
(NSAP) was the most common diagnosis (36.0%), followed by appendicitis (14.9%) and urological causes (12.8%). There was an unnecessary appendicectomy rate of 25.0%. Admission with pain because of urological causes was over twice that of previous reports. Duration of stay increased greatly with age. Results from this study confirm the high mortality rate in the elderly from emergency colonic resection. Greater care in diagnosis and a conservative approach to appendicitis, with laparoscopy in females of reproductive age, may produce a lower unnecessary appendicectomy rate without an increase in morbidity. If the diagnosis of NSAP could be made earlier and patients discharged sooner, a large saving in resources would result. This early diagnosis is not yet possible.
J R Coll Surg Edinb 1992
Dec
PMID:Abdominal pain as a cause of acute admission to hospital. 751 36
In most cases traveler's diarrhea is a self-limiting disease not requiring professional assistance. As data on self-treatment are very limited, a prospective randomized trial was performed in 620 German tourists spending a two week-holiday in Turkey. 31.6% of these travelers developed diarrhea and 186 were assigned to two treatment groups, receiving either medical coal or a combination of tannalbuminate and ethacridinlactate (TA/EL). In the TA/EL group stool frequencies significantly earlier returned to normal and complaints of moderate to severe
abdominal pain
were recorded less frequently (50 vs. 82.2%) than in patients receiving charcoal preparations. Both medications were well tolerated and TA/EL appeared more efficient for self medication of uncomplicated traveler's diarrhea.
Med Klin (Munich) 1992
Dec
15
PMID:[Traveler's diarrhea in Turkey. Prospective randomized therapeutic comparison of charcoal versus tannin albuminate/ethacridine lactate]. 128 25
We are reporting the case of a 23-yr-old patient who had recurring episodes of acute pancreatitis characterized by the typical
abdominal pain
, elevated serum levels of pancreatic enzymes, and enlargement of the pancreas and edema on sonogram. These episodes were accompanied by facial erythema with conjunctival injection, generalized pruritus, diarrhea, and eosinophilia, and they were induced by the consumption of milk. The serum levels of IgE specific to cow milk proteins and to beta-lactoglobulin were increased. We suggest that these episodes are caused by a milk allergy (milk), that has been described as an unusual cause of acute pancreatitis.
Int J Pancreatol 1992
Dec
PMID:Acute pancreatitis associated with milk allergy. 128 25
Adrenal cysts are uncommon. A case of left adrenal cystic lymphangioma in 16 year old boy is reported. The adrenal cyst was a chance finding during radiological investigation for
abdominal pain
. Ultrasound and CT scan showed the cyst and suggested the correct diagnosis of cystic lymphangioma of the left adrenal gland. The patient underwent surgery and a left adrenalectomy was performed. Histology confirmed the previous diagnosis of cystic lymphangioma.
Minerva Chir 1992
Dec
PMID:[Adrenal cystic lymphangioma. A case report]. 128 61
Twelve patients who underwent laparotomy for suspected acute appendicitis were found to have Crohn's disease of the terminal ileum. Appendectomy was performed in all although in only four patients was the appendix grossly inflamed. Postoperative complications, either abscess or fistula, developed in four patients (33%). Careful investigation of the records revealed some preoperative diagnostic clues: a history of recurrent
abdominal pain
and/or diarrhea (83%), physical examination revealing normal temperature (50%), and laboratory results compatible with a chronic process such as microcytic anemia (33%) and hypoproteinemia/hypoalbuminemia/hypocholesterolemia (50%). As the differential diagnosis between Crohn's disease and appendicitis is difficult and the surgical approach to the appendix in the presence of Crohn's disease is controversial, we illuminate some practical points in the preoperative evaluation of these patients and deal with the question of whether appendectomy should be performed in these patients.
J Clin Gastroenterol 1992
Dec
PMID:Preoperative clues to Crohn's disease in suspected, acute appendicitis. Report of 12 cases and review of the literature. 129 36
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