Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016199 (flank pain)
2,189 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A total of 50 patients--37 female and 13 male--with an average age of 50 +/- 27 years (23-86 years), suffering from rim-calcified gallbladder stones, underwent extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL), using an ultrasound-guided overhead module of Lithostar Plus (Siemens Company). The total number of stones was 87, with an average diameter of 16 +/- 7 (7-38) mm. 29 patients had a solitary stone, 13 had two and 8 patients three or more stones. All patients received adjunct medication of 10 mg/kg body weight chenodeoxycholic and ursodeoxycholic acid 14 days prior to ESWL as a single bedtime dose. An average number of 5,300 +/- 2,200 shock waves (1,200-15,000) was applied for stone disintegration. The corresponding energy amounted to 750 bar. 29 patients needed one, 21 two or more treatments. After ESWL a variety of clinical abnormalities was observed: flank pain (15%), transient microhaematuria (33%) and transient macrohaematuria (2%). Subsequent to ESWL 5 patients suffered from complications such as biliary obstruction 3 weeks to 9 months after treatment and had to undergo ERCP. Three times endoscopic papillotomy was performed to remove stones from the common bile duct. Up to now 4 patients have undergone cholecystectomy: acute cholecystitis (n = 3), recurrent colicky pain (n = 1). 20 patients have been followed up over a 12-month period; 12 of them are completely free of stones and fragments.
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PMID:[Extracorporeal shock wave treatment of calcium containing gallbladder calculi]. 151 91

Biliary and urinary obstructions can be managed endoscopically or cystoscopically, surgically or by percutansous intervention or drainage. If the obtructed system is infected, emergent decompression is needed. Early recognition and treatment is paramount in both conditions. Acute cholangitis can present many different ways, from mild symptoms to fulminant sepsis. It is usually a result of ascending bacterial colonization and biliary obstruction resulting in bacterial overgrowth. Therefore, those patients with recent biliary instrumentation or previous biliary modification are at higher risk. Charcot's triad of fever, right upper quadrant abdominal pain, and jaundice is only seen in 50%-70% of patients. Fever is seen in over 90% of cases, pain is seen in 70% of cases, and jaundice is seen in 60% of cases. Altered mental status and hypotension are associated with severe cases. All 5 symptoms of fever, right upper quadrant abdominal pain, jaundice, altered mental status, and hypotension are referred to as Reynold's Pentad. Acute pyonephrosis can also present many different ways, from minimal symptoms to fulminant sepsis. Fever, chills, and flank pain are the classic symptoms, although some patients may be relatively asymptomatic. Pyonephrosis may present with a classic triad of fever, flank pain, and hydronephrosis, or simply hydronephrosis and sepsis. Pyonephrosis usually occurs as a result of urinary obstruction with either an ascending infection of the urinary tract or hematogenous spread of a bacterial pathogen as the culprit. Up to 75% of cases are related to urinary stone disease. Patients are at increased risk for pyonephrosis when they haven anatomic urinary tract obstruction, certain chronic diseases (diabetes meliitus and AIDS), or are immunosuppressed due to immunodeficiency or medications, (chronic steroid therapy).
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PMID:Obstruction of the Biliary and Urinary System. 2922 63