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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The case presented here is a three-month-old male infant with the Beckwith-Wiedemann's syndrome. Clinically, the patient was characterized by macroglossia, visceromegaly, umbilical
hernia
, microcephalus and other multiple malformations such as facial flame nevus or ear lobe grooves. The patient died of
bronchopneumonia
at the age of three months, and an autopsy was performed. Morphological examination revealed adrenal cytomegaly, hyperplasia and hypertrophy of the pancreatic islets, adrenal rest tissue in the right testis or hypertrophy of muscle fibers of the tongue associated with fibrous degenerative change, in addition to
bronchopneumonia
of the lung, causing his death. On electron microscopical examination, the cytomegalic cell of the adrenal was characteristic of large pleomorphic nucleus and granular substances with high density in the cytoplasm. In this case, thorough histologic search revealed no evidence of tumorous growth in the organs, though the exomphalos-macroglossia-gigantism syndrome has been of interest in its relationship to the occasional occurrence of Wilms tumor, adrenal carcinoma or other tumors.
...
PMID:Beckwith-Wiedemann's syndrome--a report of an autopsied case--. 43 92
Eight cases of symptomatic hiatal hernia were investigated; four presented with respiratory symptoms simulating chronic asthmatic bronchitis or
bronchopneumonia
. Among 27 patients with gastro-oesophageal reflux but without radiologically visible
hernia
, six presented with fibrous stricture; no stricture was found in association with hiatal hernia. It is suggested that patients with gastro-oesophageal reflux should be offered surgical follow-up or surgery to prevent the development of a stricture before the more easily recognizable symptoms of heart burn and postural acid regurgitation get worse.
...
PMID:Hiatal hernia in the African. 54 91
Is an acute bronchial, obstructive disease of the infant caused mainly by the respiratory syncytial virus. It appears epidemically preceded by infections of the upper respiratory ducts, followed by coughing, dysnea, expiratory sibilants, suprasternal and subcostal during inspiration and radiologic evidences of choneking. In the differential diagnosis the physician must consider pulmonary dysgenesis, diaphragmatic
hernia
, congenital lobar emphysema, congenital cardiopathy, pneumothorax, obstruction due to foreign body, asthmatic crisis and fibrocystic disease. Fundamentally, two diagnoses should be discarded: 1) dyspenic bacterial bronchopneumonic syndrome; 2) prime infection T. B.
bronchopneumonia
with bronchiolitic syndrome.
...
PMID:[Bronchiolitis]. 742 29
Various thoracic disorders were radiographically diagnosed in 362 cattle and buffaloes, which accounted for 18.7% of total cases involving these 2 species. Of these 362 cases, diaphragmatic
hernia
accounted for about 42%, tuberculosis 18% and
bronchopneumonia
15%. Other disorders included metastatic neoplasia, pericarditis with or without foreign-body involvement, hydrothorax and foreign bodies.
...
PMID:Radiographic diagnosis of bovine thoracic disorders. 746 78
We describe a 10 month old boy with alpha-mannosidosis who presented with recurrent
bronchopneumonia
and diarrhea. Facial coarsening, deafness, hepatosplenomegaly, umbilical
hernia
, pectus carinatum and widespread Mongolian spots were distinguishing features. He also had mild skeletal deformities grouped together as 'dysostosis multiplex', and vacuolated lymphocytes on peripheral blood smear. These findings coupled with an abnormal urinary oligosaccharide pattern led to the suspicion of a lysosomal storage disease in the patient which proved to be alpha-mannosidosis. An exceptionally low level of alpha-mannosidase activity was subsequently found in serum and cultured skin fibroblasts. The patient's brother, who had died at the age of 10 months, had similar features. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case reported from Turkey.
...
PMID:Alpha-mannosidosis: the first Turkish case. 779 63
Preweaning losses: During the period from September 1991 to August 1992, from 18021 piglets born alive 3417 died until weaning. Major causes of death were crushing by the sow, low birth weight, starvation, splay-leg disease and enteritis. Of these animals 51.6% died during the first three days of life. Mortality decreased during the preweaning period. Litters with more than 11 pigs had elevated death rates of piglets. Mortality was higher during the cold season (except January). Postweaning losses: During the postweaning period 6.4% of the weaned piglets were lost. Of these piglets 4.1% died and the remaining 2.3% were sold due to umbilical
hernia
. Diseases of the gastrointestinal tract were the main cause of death. Losses of gilts: During the one-year surveillance period 373 gilts were lost. Most of 18 deceased animals died from bleeding due to gastric ulcers and from purulent
bronchopneumonia
. 314 (91.1%) of the remaining 355 gilts were sold, the residual 9.9% of the animals were slaughtered mainly because of diseases of the musculoskeletal system. Losses of sows: In the breeding herd of 950 to 1035 animals, 35 sows died and 492 were culled in the course of one year. Most deaths resulted from cardiac failure and splenic torsion. Urogenital and locomotor diseases were the main reason for culling. The sows removed from the herd had produced an average of 3.6 litters, but 52.8% had produced no more than 3 litters. Losses of boars: During the survey 10 boars were slaughtered.
...
PMID:[Causes of mortality in a swine breeding establishment]. 830 62
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is an important means of supporting newborns with respiratory failure. While short- and long-term follow-up of ECMO survivors has been thoroughly addressed, there is no systematic study of nonsurvivors. Nineteen nonsurvivors of newborn ECMO with autopsy results are divided into two groups: group 1: 12 patients who had intracranial lesions as the primary cause of death (hemorrhage 8, encephalomalacia 2, infarct 2); and group 2: 7 patients with nonintracranial primary causes of death. Patients in group 1 were significantly more acidotic, hypotensive, and smaller in age and birth weight pre-ECMO. Among group 2 patients, two with diaphragmatic
hernia
died of primary pulmonary disease (diffuse alveolar damage, pulmonary hypoplasia and necrosis,
bronchopneumonia
). One of 2 patients with persistent fetal circulation (PFC) was treated with massive doses of tolazoline and suffered fatal gastrointestinal hemorrhage and ischemic necrosis of heart, spleen, testes, and adrenals. The other PFC patient had severe pulmonary interstitial fibrosis. Two patients with meconium aspiration and a patient with streptococcal sepsis had diffuse pulmonary damage and multiple organ failure (renal medullary necrosis, and infarcts of adrenal, spleen, liver). In this series, intracranial pathology was the most common cause of death in ECMO patients, related to gestational age, acidosis, hypoxia, and size, but probably unrelated to carotid ligation.
...
PMID:A clinical-pathological study of nonsurvivors of newborn ECMO. 843 64
Surgery as a treatment modality for morbid obesity has shown impressive progress over the past decades because of a better understanding of the metabolic characteristics of obesity and the rationale for its surgical treatment. Biliopancreatic diversion was first performed in humans in 1976. Since then it has been an excellent operation for morbid obesity to achieve long-term weight reduction. We present our laparoscopic biliopancreatic diversion protocol, with or without distal gastrectomy (Resa's operation). From 1995 to October 2008 we operated on 201 patients; open biliopancreatic diversion was performed in 48 patients, while the remaining patients underwent laparoscopic biliopancreatic diversion (84 laparoscopic Scopinaro's operations, 69 laparoscopic Resa's operations). The mean operating time was 140 minutes for the open procedures, 180 minutes for Scopinaro's laparoscopic operation and 135 minutes for Resa's laparoscopic operation. The mean postoperative stay was 5.5 days. Our mortality rate consisted of two patients (0.99%) who had pulmonary embolisms. Other major complications were three cases of leakage from the jejuno-ileal anastomosis, 18 cases of incisional
hernia
, 6 cases of metabolic diseases; 1 case of acute hepatitis and 1 case of
bronchopneumonia
. Biliopancreatic diversion can be performed satisfactorily by laparoscopy. A factor that may reduce the technical difficulties and make the technique totally reversible is the gastric sparing. Thus an upper digestive endoscopy can determine preoperatively whether the patient will need a gastrectomy, depending on its results.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic biliopancreatic diversion: our preliminary experience with 201 consecutive cases. 1953 86