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Query: UMLS:C0016199 (flank pain)
2,189 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two cases of renal angiomyolipomas in female siblings associated with tuberous sclerosis were reported. The first case was a 47-year-old housewife who visited the hospital because of severe right flank pain. Bilateral renal angiomyolipomas and hemorrhage in the right angiomyolipoma were recognized by computerized tomography, ultrasonography and renal angiography. After 2 months she had another episode of left flank pain and was diagnosed to have hemorrhage in the left renal tumor. The pain remissed by conservative treatment. Bilateral nephrectomy and hemodialysis would be necessary if she were to have a third attack. The second case was her 36-year-old sister with the chief complaint of left flank pain and genital bleeding. CT and renal angiography suggested a large angiomyolipoma in her left kidney and a small one in her right kidney. Left nephrectomy, right partial nephrectomy and hysterectomy were performed to prevent intratumoral hemorrhage. The histopathological diagnosis was angiomyolipoma of kidneys, uterus and lymphnodes of right renal hilus. Although pre-operative differentiation of angiomyolipoma from renal cell carcinoma has been difficult, recently diagnosis has become possible by CT, ultra-sonography and angiography.
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PMID:[Renal angiomyolipoma: report of 2 cases of tuberous sclerosis in female siblings]. 651 96

Herein we report a case of perirenal encysted hematoma secondary to renal cell adenocarcinoma. A 57-year-old woman was hospitalized because of a palpable mass in the left flank. She had had an episode of left flank pain. X-ray studies demonstrated a tumor in the left kidney and a large cystic mass beneath the left kidney. The cyst was excised by nephrectomy. Histological examination of the large cyst revealed perirenal encysted hematoma secondary to renal cell adenocarcinoma. Six months postoperatively, she is now free from left lumbar pain, and alive with lung and liver metastasis.
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PMID:[A case of perirenal encysted hematoma secondary to renal cell adenocarcinoma]. 652 44

Chronic lower abdominal pain or flank pain in adults may be associated with vesicoureteral reflux. Although it is well known that renal scarring may occur in adults with vesicoureteral reflux associated with urinary tract infection, renal function may vary significantly when these patients are found to have sterile vesicoureteral reflux. We report 2 cases of lifelong intermittent lower abdominal pain associated with vesicoureteral reflux without damage to the upper urinary tracts. A voiding cystourethrogram should be included in the evaluation of adults with chronic lower quadrant pain or flank pain even if excretory urography and cystoscopy are normal and the urine is sterile.
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PMID:Chronic lower quadrant abdominal pain due to vesicoureteral reflux. 682 67

We report 7 cases of long-standing lumbar or flank pain associated with small renal calculi located peripherally in a calix and no obvious obstruction. After stone removal by percutaneous puncture the patients were relieved of the pain.
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PMID:Small renal caliceal calculi as a cause of pain. 688 9

The clinical presentation of 105 cases of retrocecal appendicitis was reviewed. Thirty-six percent of the patients had the classic appendicitis scenario of periumbilical pain localizing to the right lower quadrant, accompanied by anorexia, nausea and vomiting, and tenderness and guarding in the right lower quadrant. The remaining 64 percent had subtle variations of this presentation. Retrocecal appendicitis did not have a distinctive clinical pattern in our series. Twelve of the 105 retrocecal appendices were also retroperitoneal. The diagnosis was delayed in four patients and two had flank pain. Five of the twelve appendices were either gangrenous or perforated. Although the number of patients is small, we conclude that the traditional type of retrocecal appendicitis can occur in the retroperitoneal subgroup but that his anatomic variation is infrequent. The incidence in our series was 2.5 percent.
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PMID:Retrocecal appendicitis. 722 38

The 15th reported case of isolated renal mucormycosis (infection of the kidney with fungus of the order Mucorales, in the absence of infection elsewhere in the body) is presented. The patient was a 36-year-old human immunodeficiency virus-infected man, actively using iv drugs, who suffered 6 wk of flank pain and fever before diagnosis was made by percutaneous renal biopsy. He received 4 months of amphotericin B treatment, then no therapy for 6 months before dying with no evidence of mucormycosis. Isolated renal mucormycosis should be suspected in those with an underlying immunocompromising illness or history of iv drug use who have persistent flank pain and fever, but sterile urine cultures. Computed tomographic scanning with contrast should then be performed; findings of severe inflammation or bacterial infection, despite an indolent clinical course with sterile or nondiagnostic urine and blood cultures, are suggestive of isolated renal mucormycosis, and renal biopsy under computed tomographic guidance should be performed, despite the potential risk of disseminated infection. Although our patient was treated with amphotericin B alone, nephrectomy with or without amphotericin B therapy appears to be more likely to cure infection and relieve pain and constitutional symptoms.
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PMID:Isolated renal mucormycosis: case report and review. 757 48

We report two cases of a pain syndrome caused by large adrenal metastases in patients with lung cancer. A review of the literature identified 23 previously reported patients with primary lung cancers who appear to have had a similar syndrome, although in none of these cases were other likely causes of the pain syndrome carefully excluded. The syndrome characteristically includes unilateral flank pain but may have abdominal components as well, and has only been reported in patients with large metastases (> or = 5 cm in largest diameter). Although the mechanism by which large adrenal metastases cause the pain syndrome is not clear, we suggest that treatment that includes local anesthetic agents or steroids may be effective. The pain syndrome caused by large adrenal metastases is not included in reviews of cancer pain syndromes but needs to be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with lung cancer and flank or abdominal pain.
J Pain Symptom Manage 1995 Feb
PMID:A pain syndrome associated with large adrenal metastases in patients with lung cancer. 773 Jun 88

A 44-year-old man presented with a history of sudden onset left flank pain, accompanied by nausea and microhematuria. The diagnosis of ureteropelvic junction calculus was made and the patient was scheduled for extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL). ESWL uses an electrical spark to generate a shock wave that is focused on a stone in the ureter or kidney. The shock waves mechanically stress and crush the stone, eliminating the need for manipulation or open procedure. The pain of ESWL is caused by skin sensation. Eutectic mixture of local anesthetics (EMLA) cream (2.5% lidocaine and 2.5% prilocaine) has been used as a topical anesthetic on intact skin for various minor procedures. Studies have shown that it is effective in dramatically decreasing or eliminating the pain of ESWL. The use of topical EMLA as an anesthetic management technique for a patient undergoing ESWL is described.
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PMID:Eutectic mixture of local anesthetic cream--topical anesthesia for extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. 788 50

Laparoscopic procedures have changed the indications for appendectomy. Routine exeresis should not be performed if a normal organ is observed during an exploratory procedure, but should be in cases with clinical manifestations of right flank pain since neurogenic appendicitis is not rare. We report a recent case observed in a 76-year-old woman. The patient was initially hospitalized for right flank pain with nausea and irregular episodes of diarrhoea. Clinical examination and complementary exploration led to cholecystectomy via subcostal access. On per-operative cholangiography the common bile duct appeared normal. Immediate follow-up was uneventful and the patient was discharged. Twelve days later, the patient complained of the same type of abdominal pain and was hospitalized with a fever at 38 degrees C and shivers. The right flank was very painful at palpation. Echography and computed tomography eliminated a subphrenic abscess or secondary pancreatitis. Pain localized at MacBurney's point 8 days later. Barium study showed a normal colon with the exception of uncomplicated diverticulosis. Subjective pain persisted and appendectomy was decided. Pathological examination revealed neurogenic appendicitis. First described in 1924, neurogenic appendicitis is relatively frequent. Macroscopically, a sclerous fibromyxomatous nodule obliterates the lumen. Microscopically, the central obliterating lesion is composed of hyperplastic nervous tissue in a fibromyxoid matrix, particularly important at the point of the appendix. Clinically neurogenic appendicitis is usually chronic and the appendix appears healthy in situ. Cure is always achieved with resection. Laparoscopic procedures can identify para-appendicular causes of painful abdominal syndromes and sclero-atrophic appendicitis, but in the absence of another explanation exeresis appears to be justified due to the possibility of neurogenic appendicitis.
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PMID:[Neurogenic appendicitis. A case]. 793 31

During pregnancy, dilatation of the urinary collecting system is very common. Acute hydronephrosis is one of the most common causes of severe flank pain in pregnancy. Severe complications of hydronephrosis of pregnancy, such as pain, renal failure or a ruptured collecting system, occur very occasionally. A rare case of spontaneous rupture treated conservatively is presented.
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PMID:Non-traumatic rupture of kidney in pregnancy--case report and review. 794 94


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