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Query: UMLS:C0008325 (
cholecystitis
)
3,686
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Visceral pain is caused by either distension or contraction of the visceral muscular wall or obstruction of hollow gastrointestinal organs. Unlike the somatic pain due to peritonitis, visceral pain is diffuse, epigastric, periumbilical and is often accompanied by nausea, vomiting and
restlessness
. We demonstrate the significance of visceral pain in the differential diagnosis of the acute abdomen presenting five cases of appendicitis and
cholecystitis
. A correct early diagnosis of the acute abdomen while signs of local peritonitis are still absent (appendicitis in atypical location, recurrent acute appendicitis, spontaneous reopening of an occlusion) is facilitated by the awareness for the characteristics and symptoms of visceral pain, and therefore careful taking of the patient's history. A history lacking visceral pain on the other hand represents an important clue for the diagnosis of other conditions (gynecological, diverticulititis, etc.) with acute pelvic peritonitis.
...
PMID:[Visceral pain in acute abdomen]. 1032 Nov 25
Bowel problems occur in 27% to 62% of patients with spinal cord injuries (SCI), most commonly constipation, distention, abdominal pain, rectal bleeding, hemorrhoids, bowel accidents, and autonomic hyperreflexia. The acute abdomen, with a mortality of 9.5%, does not present with rigidity or absent bowel sounds but rather with dull/poorly-localized pain, vomiting, or
restlessness
, with tenderness, fever, and leukocytosis in up to 50% of patients. Fecal impaction may present with anorexia and nausea. Methods used for bowel care include laxatives, anal massage, manual evacuation, and enemas. Randomized, double-blind studies demonstrated the effectiveness of neostigmine, which increases cholinergic tone, combined with glycopyrrolate, an anticholinergic agent with minimal activity in the colon that reduces extracolonic side-effects. Improved bowel function occurs with anterior sacral root stimulators which may be combined with an S2 to S4 posterior sacral rhizotomy which interrupts the reflex arc by cutting the posterior roots carrying the spasticity-causing sensory nerves. For severe constipation, a colostomy reduces time for bowel care, providing a clean environment so decubitus ulcers may heal. Gallstones occur in 17% to 31% of patients, and acalculous
cholecystitis
in 3.7% of patients with acute SCI. A high index of suspicion is needed to properly diagnose bowel problems in SCI.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal involvement in spinal cord injury: a clinical perspective. 2245 63