Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0009319 (colitis)
19,384 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clindamycin (7-chloro-7-deoxylincomycin) may induce mild or severe colitis. In 28 months, clindamycin-associated diarrhea was encountered in 8 patients who had received oral therapy. Severe, acute colitis was seen in 4 older patients, 3 of whom had acute pseudomembranous colitis and one who had an adynamic ileus mimicking an acute abdomen. Mild colitis with protracted diarrhea occurred in 4 younger patients who had mild, nonspecific inflammation in the rectum which responded to symptomatic treatment. The mechanism and true incidence of diarrhea as a sequel of clindamycin therapy are unknown. In all 8 patients, the use of clindamycin was arbitrary. Because of potentially serious gastrointestinal disturbance, including acute pseudomembranous colitis, clindamycin should be reserved for anaerobic and other serious infections.
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PMID:Colitis associated with clindamycin therapy. 120 37

Since the left lateral position facilitates the entry of air into the rectosigmoid, it has been employed in the plain-film evaluation of patients with abdominal distension. The value of this view is illustrated by examples of patients with (a) colonic ileus due to imipramine hydrochloride (Tofranil) or chlorpromazine, (b) partial mechanical obstruction due to diverticulitis, (c) involvement of the rectum by Hirschsprung's disease, and (d) sequential evaluation of a patient with clindamycin colitis. This simple maneuver is recommended for (a) evaluation of patients with plain-film evidence of low colonic obstruction, (b) problems of differential diagnosis between bowel obstruction and ileus, and (c) evaluation of patients with conditions affecting the rectosigmoid.
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PMID:The left lateral view in the plain-film assessment of abdominal distension. 126 52

A four year old Dutch warmblooded mare was born and raised in the province of North-Brabant, the Netherlands. On May 16, 1989, she showed signs of colic, anorexia, depression, ileus, severe dehydration and leukopenia. When the mare collapsed, euthanasia was carried out. Acute colitis and cytoplasmic inclusion bodies in macrophages were observed at autopsy. When an indirect immunofluorescence assay was performed, the Ehrlichia risticii titre of the serum was found to be 1:640.
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PMID:[A horse seropositive for Ehrlichia risticii]. 199 60

One observation of total colon diverticulosis in a male of 62 is described. Clinical signs (abdominal pains, blood in faeces, vomiting) persisted for 7 years and was aggravated by ileus. Instrumental examination revealed multiple colon diverticula, stenosing villous tumour of sigmoid colon. Besides pseudodiverticula, chronic colitis with multiple inflammatory polyps stenosing the lumen of the sigmoid colon and simulating a villous tumour was found. The conclusion is made of the ischemic nature of the colitis complicating the course of diverticulosis.
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PMID:[Total diverticulosis of the large intestine, complicated by ischemic colitis with development of multiple inflammatory polyps]. 208 75

Forty-two cases with Wilms' tumor encountered in the National Taiwan University Hospital from 1978 through 1989 were retrospectively reviewed. Included were 19 boys and 23 girls, with an age range at diagnosis from 7 days to 10 years; a majority were in the first 6 years of life. The presenting symptoms and signs included: abdominal mass (89.2%), hypertension (57.9%), hematuria (28.2%), gastrointestinal symptoms (26.3%), fever (24.3%), and body weight loss (21.6%). The initial laterality of tumor was 28 right and 14 left, with one contralateral and one ipsilateral relapse. One extrarenal Wilms' tumor (right inguinal lymph nodes) was encountered. Every case was confirmed by pathology. Histologic findings included typical Wilms' tumor (35/42), rhabdoid (3/42), anaplastic (3/42), and clear cell (1/42) types. The common sites of metastasis were lung, liver and bone. Major complications during or following therapy were severe pancytopenia, ileus, sepsis or pneumonia, delayed wound healing and tumor rupture with hemorrhage. Rare complications included irradiation hepatitis (venooclusive disease) and colitis. There were 20 deaths. The causes of death were respiratory or hepatic failure due to tumor metastasis, sepsis and internal hemorrhage. Mortality (19/20) usually occurred within two years after diagnosis and therapy. The two-year's relapse-free survival and two-year's survival rates were 51.2% and 53.7%, respectively.
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PMID:Clinical observation of Wilms' tumor. 217 35

A previous article (Part I) described the patient population and operative management of 666 patients who had surgery for nonruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms. This article details the perioperative complications and, by chi-square and logistic regression analysis, identifies the variables that are associated with each complication. In summarizing the results (below) the incidence of each complication is listed, along with the predictive risk factors in parentheses that have significance levels less than 0.05. Vascular morbidity data are as follows: intraoperative bleeding, 4.8%; postoperative bleeding requiring transfusion, 2.3% or repeat operation, 1.4% (large volume of blood transfusion and/or use of an autotransfusion device); intraoperative limb ischemia, 3.5%; graft thrombosis, 0.9% (femoropopliteal disease and/or distal anastomosis at the femoral level); distal thromboembolism, 3.3% (male sex, femoral popliteal disease, and/or intraoperative graft thrombosis); amputation, 1.2%; graft infection, 1 case. General morbidity data are as follows: cerebrovascular event, 0.6%; paraplegia, 1 case; cardiac event, 15.1% (age, previous episode of congestive heart failure, and/or electrocardiogram [ECG] evidence of a previous myocardial infarction); myocardial infarction, 5.2% (advancing age, angina, and/or prolonged aortic cross-clamp time); congestive heart failure, 8.9% (previous history of congestive heart failure, ECG evidence of ischemia, and/or chronic obstructive lung disease); arrhythmia requiring treatment, 10.5% (preoperative ventricular premature beats and/or respiratory failure requiring ventilation for more than 48 hours); new arrhythmia, 8.4% (angina and/or chronic obstructive lung disease); respiratory failure, 8.4% (chronic obstructive lung disease, large volume of blood transfused, and/or occurrence of postoperative bleeding, cerebrovascular accident, congestive heart failure, or myocardial infarction); renal damage with rise in creatinine or blood urea nitrogen, 5.4% and/or renal failure requiring dialysis, 0.6% (elevated preoperative creatinine, suprarenal aortic cross-clamping, and/or renal vein ligation); diarrhea without evidence of ischemia colitis, 7.1% and ischemic colitis, 0.6% (pelvic flow interrupted); prolonged ileus, 11.0% (aortoiliac occlusive disease, deterioration of renal function, prolonged ventilation, and/or preoperative history of angina); superficial wound infection, 1.5% and deep infection, 0.5% (femoral anastomosis and/or female sex); coagulopathy, 1.1% (large volume of blood transfused).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Multicenter prospective study of nonruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. Part II. Variables predicting morbidity and mortality. 264 60

Sonography can depict the transformation of the intestinal wall in Crohn's disease, esp. its layers. Besides demonstrating the transmural aspect of inflammation it also shows typical mesenteritis and complications such as fistula, abscess, inflammatory tumour, stenosis and ileus. Sonography proves invaluable in following up Crohn's disease. Differential diagnosis against other diseases of the bowel wall (ulcerous colitis, radiogenic, ischaemic, infectious and pseudomembranous colitis, as well as some types of lymphoma and carcinoma of the intestine) on a purely morphological basis is difficult, but nevertheless possible.
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PMID:[Sonographic structure of the intestinal wall--significance for the diagnosis of inflammatory intestinal diseases]. 267 19

At the example of the severe and foudroyant courses of the ulcerous colitis in patients who died or underwent a resection (n = 93) the severe local complications are demonstrated. 70 patients with resection of the intestine, 21 patients with diagnostic laparotomy as well as 32 deceased patients with Crohn's disease were compared with them. Transmigration peritonitides (3.3% of 458 patients with ulcerous colitis except haemorrhagic proctitis), perforation peritonitides (2.0%) as well as the toxic megacolon (3.3%) alone or in combination are the most frequent severe complications. Therapy-resistant intestinal haemorrhages (1.1%) are infrequent. In 0.9% of the cases colorectal carcinomata appear. The acute or chronic mechanical ileus is the most frequent complication in Crohn's disease (21.1% of 171 patients altogether). Intraabdominal abscesses are found in 11.7%. In participation of the colon fistulae are nearly twice as frequent as in localisation of the small intestine. Free perforations of the small intestine (3.8%) are more frequently observed than perforations of the colon (2.2%).
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PMID:[Incidence of severe local complications in ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease]. 349 27

Open-heart surgery was performed on 1686 adult patients between 1980 and 1984, with a mortality rate due to abdominal complications of 0.6%. Every operation involved the use of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Abdominal complications occurred in 1.6%, with an overall mortality rate of 36%. The most frequent complication was gastrointestinal (Gl) bleeding (61%). The mortality of the patients who bled from the Gl tract was 53%. Other complications encountered were gastroduodenal ulcer, colitis, ileus, subphrenic abscess and intraperitoneal bleeding. Prolonged CPB and low output syndrome preceded multiple organ failure, which occurred in 39% of those who had abdominal complications and in 59% of those who bled. Gl bleeding after CPB did not correlate with a previous history of gastric ulcer. Reoperation because of cardiac tamponade or excessive chest tube drainage was a factor predisposing to Gl bleeding. The mortality and abdominal complication rates were significantly higher in valve surgery than in coronary revascularization.
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PMID:Abdominal complications following cardiopulmonary bypass in open-heart surgery. 349 77

Equine ehrlichial colitis (Potomac horse fever), a newly identified colitis of the horse, was first recognized in Maryland. In this report, we document occurrence of the disease in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Idaho, and Connecticut. Enzootic areas were recognized by a characteristic pattern. Frequently there was a seasonal pattern and high prevalence of sporadic colitis in unstressed horses. The attack rate per farm generally was low. Horses on pasture, as well as those stabled, were affected. Clinical signs varied from fever and depression to severe diarrhea and laminitis. Occasionally horses developed profound ileus and severe colic. Diagnosis was based on detection of an increase or decrease in serum antibody titers to Ehrlichia risticii, using an indirect fluorescent antibody technique.
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PMID:Equine ehrlichial colitis (Potomac horse fever): recognition of the disease in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Idaho, and Connecticut. 374 78


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