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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors describe a truly uncommon case of internal abdominal hernia attributable to malformation of the falciform ligament. The patient, a man aged 26, had complained in the past of cramping pain in the epigastric region, usually occurring after meals and sometimes ending with vomiting of ingested food; but all diagnostic methods and procedures had consistently ruled out any extant pathology of the stomach, duodenum, biliary tract, or pancreas. Present hospitalization was justified by a clinical picture suggesting peritonitis from perforated gastric or duodenal ulcer. At operation the authors found a strangulated loop of small intestine following left-to-right migration through a hole in the falciform ligament of the liver. In the authors' interpretation the background cause of the trouble was incomplete development of the falciform ligament, and the immediate cause of the acute episode was abnormal motility and exaggerated peristalsis of the ileum, possibly due to the presence of a diverticulum; the latter two conditions are invoked as a possible explanation for the repeated episodes of abdominal pain in the patient's history.
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PMID:[Internal abdominal hernia caused by anomaly of the falciform ligament (a case report)]. 55 70

Fourteen patients have been encountered with stercoraceous or idiopathic perforations of the colon. Seven patients had a stercoraceous perforation; four had an idiopathic perforation; and three patients remained without exact classification. All the patients were admitted to hospital because of sudden abdominal pain. All except one patient, who was in an agonal condition, were operated on with a diagnosis of peritonitis. The preoperative clinical, radiologic and laboratory examinations were not specific, and in only one instance, the provisional diagnosis was correct. The main differnece between idiopathic and stercoraceous perforations was the macroscopic and histologic appearance of the perforation. In a perforated stercoraceous ulcer, the perforation was a round or an ovoid hole with necrotic and inflammatory edges, while in the idiopathic form, the perforation was a tear with a normal appearance of the colonic wall. The treatment consisted of a closure of the perforation and a proximally situated stoma, or exteriorization. Four patients of the seven with stercoraceous perforations survived. In idiopathic perforations, the prognosis was poor. All patients died during the first 24 hours after the operation. This possibly is an indication of some basic difference in the pathophysiology of these two diseases.
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PMID:Stercoraceous and idiopathic perforations of the colon. 114 10

A 44-year old woman had pain in the epigastric region under the thorax aperture on the left side 6 weeks prior to admission. Her doctor had prescribed Rewodina and Myocuran without success. Then she suffered circulatory collapse twice. Upon hospitalization, she experienced colicky upper abdominal pain and vomiting. She had been taking oral contraceptives (OCs) for 13 years. Spontaneous liver rupture attributable to adenoma was suspected, based on computer tumograms, and laparotomy bore out the suspicion. However, the cause was peliosis hepatis: the left half of the liver was more altered than the right, and a 10cm parenchyma defect was located under the left lateral liver lobe to which a large intrahepatic cavity filled with coagulum was attached. There was a copious amount of blood in the upper abdomen and another hole was filled with old blood. Partial liver resection was performed. The patient returned 3 weeks after recuperation because of fluctuating inflamed swelling developed on the right side. An incision was made to remove the abscess, but instead of finding pus, massive bleeding ensued whose source could not be located; it was squelched by tampons. Removal of the tampons 7 days later started another rupture with signs of liver insufficiency, and the patient died. Although the role of OCs in inducing liver changes has not been conclusively proven, the fact that she had taken OCs for years without any medical supervision seems to implicate this contraceptive method.
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PMID:[Liver rupture in peliosis hepatis]. 190 60

A 28-year-old woman with a previous history of restorative proctocolectomy for complicated ulcerative colitis had acute onset of severe abdominal pain that was diagnosed at another hospital as a perforated peptic ulcer. Careful history-taking revealed that she had blunt trauma to the abdomen one day before admission. Laparotomy detected a perforation hole at the afferent loop of the ileal pouch. Debridement and primary closure of the perforation, with temporary decompression of the pouch, resulted in a good outcome. With the increasing popularity of selecting restorative proctocolectomy for the treatment of polyposis coli and ulcerative colitis, more and more pouches will be constructed. Possible perforation of the ileal pouch should be considered when such patients present with a perforated hollow viscus. With appropriate management, the pouch can be saved. Review of the literature revealed no similar reports.
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PMID:Traumatic perforation of ileal pouch. Report of a case. 291 Jun 62

The clinical course of a case of vesicosigmoidal fistula is presented. The patient, a 76-year-old woman, became aware of terminal micturition pain and pollakisuria in February, 1985. She was first treated under the diagnosis of cystitis to be relieved of her subjective symptoms, although there was no improvement of pyuria. She also began to feel lower abdominal pain on April 3, 1985. After various examinations including intravenous pyelography, enteroclysis and cystoscopy the diagnosis of vesicosigmoidal fistula originating from sigmoid diverticulitis was established. Careful observation at operation revealed remarkable adhesion among the sigmoid colon, bladder, uterus and left ovary. The sigmoid colon, was resected followed by end-to-end anastomosis. Because of considerably extensive inflammatory changes over the mucosal membrane of the bladder, the hole of fistula on the vesical wall was simply closed from outside of the bladder without performing partial cystectomy. Histological examination only demonstrated non-specific inflammatory changes without evidence of malignancy. She had a favorable progress postoperatively.
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PMID:[A case of vesicosigmoidal fistula]. 304 80

We report a case of spontaneous intraperitoneal rupture of the bladder. A 54-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with the chief complaints of severe lower abdominal pain, dysuria and macroscopic hematuria in October, 1985. In 1969, she had had a radical hysterectomy and postoperative irradiation for cancer of the uterus. Two years later she had undergone additional irradiation. On physical examination, the abdomen was tender with guarding and signs of peritonitis. Laboratory data revealed a blood urea nitrogen of 32.8 mg/dl and all electrolytes were normal. Excretory urogram showed normal upper urinary tract but irregularity of the bladder dome. Cystoscopy revealed acute inflammation of the bladder mucosa. Consequently, we made a presumptive diagnosis of radiation cystitis and she was treated with antibiotics and drip infusion. Within a week her general condition was improved and she had discharged. In June, 1986 she was admitted again with the same chief complaints as at her first admission. Cystoscopic findings showed a hole on the postero-superior wall and retrograde cystogram revealed an intraperitoneal rupture of the bladder. At exploration a necrotic bladder wall was resected and closed in 3 layers. The post operative course was uneventful.
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PMID:[Intraperitoneal spontaneous rupture of the bladder subsequent to irradiation of the uterus: a case report]. 323 25

A 33 year-old woman was admitted with chief complaint of abdominal pain and high fever. A barium-enema showed serration and a tumor was seen in the proximal ascending colon. At laparotomy, a localized tumor about 5 cm in diameter was located in the proximal portion of the ascending colon. The operation was made according to the ileoceal resection. On the macroscopic examination of the resected specimen, a small hole penetrating into the subserosa of the ascending colon was noticed and a tumor measuring approximately 3 x 1.2 x 1 cm was located under the hole. A female worm, Trichuris trichiura, was found to be harbored in the adjacent site of the lesion. Histopathologic examination revealed granulomatous tissue reaction due to penetrating of Trichuris trichiura. The patient is in good health now 20 months after operation.
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PMID:A case of granuloma of the ascending colon due to penetration of Trichuris trichiura. 722 66

In 1993, a 55-year-old-man was diagnosed with chronic active hepatitis (HCV). In January 1999, a solitary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was discovered in his liver S8, and a sub-segmental hepatectomy was performed. In July 1999, multiple recurrences in the liver were noticed, and on August 6, 1999, the first SMANCS-TAE was performed. After that, PEIT was added, and then on July 18, 2000 and November 9, 2000, a second and third SMANCS-TAE were carried out, respectively. This time multiple HCCs in the bilateral lobes were discovered, and the 4 th SMANCS-TAE was undergone on April 12, 2001. On a celiac angiogram, the right hepatic artery was shown to have been obliterated by the last TAE. In addition, accessory left gastric artery (accessory LGA) originating in the left hepatic artery (LHA) proximal to the umbilical point (UP) could be seen. So we advanced a microcatheter to the LHA distal to the accessory LGA and injected SMANCS (0.8 mg) into the left hepatic artery. On April 24, he was admitted to hospital by ambulance due to severe upper abdominal pain. The muscular defense was noticed, and an air pocket under the diaphragm was indicated on an X-ray. An emergency total gastrectomy and R-Y re-construction were performed under the diagnosis of gastric perforation. A hole of approximately 10 cm in diameter was found in the anterior wall between the cardia and the upper body, and the accessory left gastric artery (LGA) was obliterated. The principal known side effects of SMANCS are fever, nausea and vomiting. However, as far as this writer has investigated, gastric perforation has never been reported. SMANCS presumably can flow into the stomach wall through the accessory LGA, triggering necrosis of the gastric wall due to circulatory damage. Although arterial infusion of SMANCS is an effective treatment, it causes considerable vascular damage, so intensive follow-up treatment is necessary.
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PMID:[Case of gastric perforation after TAI (trancatheter arterial infusion) of SMANCS with special reference to accessory left gastric artery]. 1585 26

We report a rare case of small cell carcinoma of the stomach with metastasis to the liver and invasion of the pancreas, which was associated with acute peritonitis due to perforation of the stomach. CPT-11/CDDP chemotherapy achieved a partial response. A 60-year-old man suddenly developed abdominal pain and visited the emergency room. We diagnosed acute peritonitis due to perforation of the digestive tract because CT scan showed free air in the abdominal cavity. An emergency operation was performed with an omental patch for closing the perforated hole in the stomach. Excisional biopsy was performed to the small liver nodule. Histological findings showed that the liver nodule was metastasis from small cell carcinoma. There was no finding from the thoracic CT scan, but gastroscopy revealed a giant tumor, which was diagnosed as small cell carcinoma in histology. Therefore, we diagnosed small cell carcinoma of the stomach with liver metastasis and invasion of the pancreas. After operation, one course of FP chemotherapy was performed, but the liver metastasis increased in size. Then we changed to CPT-11/CDDP chemotherapy as second-line therapy, and achieved partial remission (PR) of both the liver metastasis and gastric tumor.
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PMID:[A case of small cell carcinoma of the stomach]. 1622 52

Fine needles with an end hole or multiple side holes have traditionally been used for percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI) of hepatomas. This study retrospectively evaluates the safety and efficacy of PEI of unresectable medium-to-large (3.5-9 cm) hepatomas using a multipronged needle and with conscious sedation. Twelve patients, eight men and four women (age 51-77 years; mean: 69) received PEI for hepatomas, mostly subcapsular or exophytic in location with average tumor size of 5.6 cm (range: 3.5-9.0 cm). Patients were consciously sedated and an 18G retractable multipronged needle (Quadrafuse needle; Rex Medical, Philadelphia, PA) was used for injection under real-time ultrasound guidance. By varying the length of the prongs and rotating the needle, the alcohol was widely distributed within the tumor. The progress of ablation was monitored by contrast-enhanced ultrasound, computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) after each weekly injection and within a month after the final (third) injection and 3 months thereafter. An average total of 63 mL (range: 20-154 ml) of alcohol was injected per patient in an average of 2.3 sessions. Contrast-enhanced CT, ultrasound, or MRI was used to determine the degree of necrosis. Complete necrosis was noted in eight patients (67%), near-complete necrosis (90-99%) in two (16.7%), and partial success (50-89%) in two (16.7%). Follow-up in the first 9 months showed local recurrence in two patients and new lesions in another. There was no mortality. One patient developed renal failure, liver failure, and localized perforation of the stomach. He responded to medical treatment and surgery was not required for the perforation. One patient had severe postprocedural abdominal pain and fever, and another had transient hyperbilirubinemia; both recovered with conservative treatment. PEI with a multipronged needle is a new, safe, and efficacious method in treating medium-to-large-sized hepatocellular carcinoma under conscious sedation. Its survival benefits require further investigations.
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PMID:Percutaneous ethanol injection of unresectable medium-to-large-sized hepatomas using a multipronged needle: efficacy and safety. 1720 Sep 5


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