Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (disseminated intravascular coagulation)
8,673 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In recent years, with the development of diagnostic procedures, the number of cases of early carcinoma of the gall bladder has been seen to gradually increase. In this paper, 8 cases of early gall bladder carcinoma have been evaluated, using a diagnostic approach. Cholecystolithiasis was the complication in 6 cases, and abdominal pain was seen as the most common symptom. Findings by various image diagnoses, such as ultrasonography, DIC, ERCP, and CT scan are described and discussed with a review of literature. Ultrasonography was considered to be the most useful tool for the detection and diagnosis of an early carcinoma of the gall bladder. A survey is thought to be required, involving the cases that have accumulated throughout the entire nation.
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PMID:[A study involving early carcinomas of the gall bladder]. 329 66

We investigated the 58 cases of cholecystolithiasis including 8 cases of choledocholithiasis treated with laparoscopic cholecystectomy. All patients received spiral CT scanning with drip infusion cholangiography (DIC-SCT), and 1.6 patients received endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC), and the detection rates of the gallbladder, the bile duct and the cystic duct were compared. The gallbladder could be seen in 86.2% of cases with DIC-SCT and in 63.8% of cases with conventional DIC. The junction between the cystic duct and the common bile duct could be seen in 18 of 58 cases with DIC and in 49 of 58 cases with DIC-SCT. The DIC-SCT showed significantly superior anatomical details compared with images with conventional DIC. A comparison of DIC, ERC and DIC-SCT revealed that the junction between the cystic duct and the common bile duct could be identified in 14 of 16 cases undergoing ERC, in 13 of 16 cases receiving DIC-SCT and in 4 of 16 cases receiving DIC. Significant differences were noted among DIC-SCT, ERC and conventional DIC. We concluded that DIC-SCT is easy, non-invasive and useful for the preoperative assessment of laparoscopic cholecystectomy and also helpful for avoiding damage to the bile duct.
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PMID:[Computed tomography with continuous transport and continuous scanner rotation for laparoscopic cholecystectomy]. 759 42

In order to assess the efficacy of helical CT in drip-infusion cholangiography (DIC-CT) for diagnosis of choledocholithiasis, 82 patients with biliary diseases, including 25 patients with a definite diagnosis of choledocholithiasis obtained by direct cholangiography, were investigated by DIC-CT and EUS. Comparative investigation showed that, of the 25 cases, 94.7% could be imaged by DIC-CT and 87.5% by EUS, with respective sensitivities of 94.7% and 87.5%. The specificities in both cases were 100% and accuracies were 97.8% with DIC-CT and 96% with EUS respectively. Therefore, in diagnosis the choledocholithiasis, DIC-CT displays similar diagnostic efficiency as EUS or ERC, and can be recognized as the non-invasive and useful procedure for pre-operative diagnosis of cholecystolithiasis.
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PMID:[Usefulness of DIC-CT in choledocholithiasis]. 1039 35

We describe a 48-year-old man with cholecystolithiasis whose preoperative magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) scan showed that the right accessory hepatic duct branching from the cystic duct dominated an anterior segment of the right hepatic lobe. We observed the right accessory hepatic duct using intraoperative cholangiography, and we were able to perform laparoscopic cholecystectomy without injuring it. He had no complication after discharge, and a drip-infusion cholangiography-computed tomography (DIC-CT) scan demonstrated that the right accessory hepatic duct was intact, and it dominated an anterior segment of the right hepatic lobe. During laparoscopic cholecystectomy, a bile duct injury is the most challenging perioperative complication. We selected MRCP preoperatively; however, if it is necessary for us to observe an anomalous biliary tract more precisely, we recommend selecting DIC-CT endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. Additionally, we think a bile duct injury can be avoided with intraoperative cholangiography, even if there is an anomalous biliary tract.
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PMID:A case of an anomalous biliary tract diagnosed preoperatively. 2870 64