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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Among a variety of acute abdomens, acute torsion of omentum, first reported by Marchett in 1851, is least suspected under the impression of, most commonly, acute appendicitis and then acute cholecystitis, mesenteric thrombosis,
ovarian cyst
, perforated peptic ulcer, etc. A 52-years-old woman was admitted on May 2, 1987 with anorexia, nausea and RLQ pain for 2 days. Physical examination revealed tenderness, guarding and rigidity over RLQ. White cell count was 12.100/mm3. A reducible
hernia
was found in the right inguinal region. The operation through McBurney's incision showed blood-stained fluid. Appendix was slightly congested. A solid, gangrenous mass was palpated at right iliac fossa that disclosed a completely tight torsion of omentum twisting 6 times counterclockwise with distal infarction. Segmental omentectomy, appendectomy and hernioplasty were done. The patient's recovery was uneventful. This case emphasizes the necessity of routine examination of the omentum during the course of abdominal exploration especially when serosanguinous fluid was encountered in the peritoneal cavity.
...
PMID:[Acute torsion of greater omentum. Report of a case mimicking acute appendicitis]. 263 74
With the use of maternal ultrasonography, 22 infants had an anomaly identified before delivery. Nine had gastrochisis. In all, ultrasonography was performed because of an elevated maternal serum alpha 1 fetoprotein level. Ultrasonography for other indications identified three infants with omphaloceles, three with cystic adenomatoid malformation of the lung, two with duodenal atresia, two with posterior urethral valves, and one each with obstruction of the ureteropelvic junction, a retroperitoneal teratoma, and an
ovarian cyst
. Infants were delivered in a neonatal center able to provide total care from the time of birth, thus the risks of transport over long distances were avoided. One of the infants with cystic adenomatoid malformation was incorrectly diagnosed as having a congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
, and the complete posterior urethral valve bilateral hydronephrosis complex was not identified in this infant until after delivery. The ability to diagnose complex anomalies correctly places new responsibilities on the surgeon who must counsel the parents on his ability to successfully treat the identified anomaly. Improved diagnostic accuracy, increased case findings, careful counselling, and delivery of high-risk infants in regional centers must be major priorities to improve neonatal surgical care in the next decade.
...
PMID:Prenatal diagnosis of congenital anomalies requiring surgical correction. Implications for the future. 388 79
Cytokines are early responders in the cascade of host mediators after injury. The cytokine response in neonates following surgery and its prognostic significance were studied prospectively. Twenty-one patients (oesophageal atresia [5], congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
[4], exomphalos [4], patent vitellointestinal duct [1], anorectal anomaly [2], choledochal cyst [1], renal cyst [1],
ovarian cyst
[1], myelomeningocoele [1], and pyloric stenosis [1]) operated on at a median age of 3 days (range, 1 to 24 days) and 12 age-matched controls were included in the study. Plasma samples were obtained once in the controls, and serially preoperatively and at 1, 3, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 hours postoperatively in the patients. The levels of the cytokines, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and interleukin-8 (IL-8) were measured using the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) technique. The median plasma levels of IL-6 and IL-8 in normal controls were 2.4 pg/mL and 92.0 pg/mL, respectively. Of the 21 patients, four had postoperative complications (pulmonary consolidation [2], septicaemia [1], and oesophageal leak [1]) between days 4 and 6. All 17 uncomplicated cases had an increase in IL-6 and IL-8 in the early postoperative period, with the peak occurring within 12 hours after surgery. The mean (+/- SEM) peak levels of IL-6 and IL-8 in uncomplicated cases were of 92.6 +/- 15.8 pg/mL and 230.3 +/- 45.3 pg/mL, respectively. In the four complicated cases, there was a disproportionately higher increase in both IL-6 (peaks, 305.0, 125.0, 240.0, and 220.0 pg/mL) and IL-8 (peaks, 1500.0, 340.0, 245.0, 355.0 and pg/mL), which preceded the clinical onset of complications. The early postoperative increases in plasma IL-6 and IL-8 probably represent the stress response of neonates to surgery. Furthermore, the association of an exaggerated increase in postoperative levels of plasma IL-6 and IL-8 and postoperative complications may have prognostic significance.
...
PMID:Cytokine response of neonates to surgery. 807 24
We report a case of a 65-year-old woman who nine years previously had undergone total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingoophorectomy for a large
ovarian cyst
. During surgery the cyst had ruptured and some mucinous material had been spilled intraabdominally. Histopathological studies demonstrated the cyst to be a mucinous adenocarcinoma of low malignant potential. Appendectomy had also been performed due to an enlarged appendix, which proved to be a mucocoele. The patient had been lost to subsequent follow-up. Her current presenting symptom was a giant inguino-labial
hernia
of 25 cm diameter with two small skin perforations leaking a gelatinous discharge. Subsequent laparotomy and inguinal exploration have disclosed herniated small intestine with an attached metastatic multicystic mucinous adenocarcinoma. This case represents a case of borderline mucinous adeno-carcinoma-pseudomyxoma peritonei recurring in a unique pattern as a huge inguino-labial
hernia
, and serves to emphasize the possible consequences of spillage of
ovarian cyst
contents during surgery.
...
PMID:Recurrent mucinous adenocarcinoma of the ovary presenting as an inguino-labial hernia. 885 11
Cowden's disease (CD) is an autosomal dominant disorder which confers a high susceptibility to diverse benign and malignant tumors. The PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted in chromosome ten) gene has been identified as a tumor suppressor gene responsible for cancers of the endometrium, ovary, prostate, and glioblastomas. Recently, germline mutations of this gene were also found in patients with CD, and it is now recognized as a gene responsible for this disease. We identified a germline nonsense mutation at codon 130 in exon 5 of PTEN in a 56-year-old Japanese woman with CD. The patient had adenoid facies and mucocutaneous lesions including multiple facial papules, acral keratoses on neck and shoulders, palmoplantar keratoses, multiple oral papillomas, scrotal tongue, mucosal and cutaneous hemangiomas, and a sclerotic fibroma on the arm. She also had benign and malignant polypoid neoplasms throughout the entire digestive tract, including adenocarcinoma of the colon and submucosal lipomas of the rectum, as well as bilateral breast carcinomas, multinodular goiters, an
ovarian cyst
with a fibroma-like nodule, hepatic hemangiomas, and abdominal
hernia
. We searched CD cases with the same genotypic PTEN mutation as the present case and compared their phenotypes. Further studies will disclose a better understanding of the role of mutation in the PTEN gene in the course of tumorigenesis of both benign and malignant tumors developed in patients with CD.
...
PMID:Germline mutation of the PTEN gene in a Japanese patient with Cowden's disease. 1129 50
The objectives of this study were to evaluate whether adequate observation of abdominal pathologic features related to peritoneal dialysis (PD) was possible with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) under routine conditions, i.e., against the background of the dialysate and without contrast medium. For 16 male and seven female patients (mean age, 51.8 +/- 15.0 yr; mean duration of PD, 324 +/- 542 d), 25 peritoneal MRI studies were performed with the intraperitoneal dialysate as usual. Indications were symptoms or combinations of symptoms, such as leakage or abdominal wall edema (n = 3), bloody dialysate (n = 4), suspected herniation (n = 1), suspected ultrafiltration failure (n = 2), and abdominal pain (n = 5), or routine assessment after initiation of PD (n = 12). The MRI protocol, which was performed with a 1.0-T scanner, consisted of breath-hold, coronal and transverse, T2-weighted, half-Fourier single-shot turbo spin-echo sequences, using a standard body-array coil. MRI studies were well tolerated and successfully completed for all except two patients. Results indicated a leak along the catheter (n = 1), a leak in an umbilical
hernia
(n = 1), suspected leakage (n = 1), hernias (n = 5, in three patients), intraperitoneal adhesions (n = 5, in four patients), a ruptured
ovarian cyst
(n = 1), and pleural effusions (n = 4). Pathologic findings unrelated to PD or located extra-abdominally were observed in 19 of the 25 studies. The catheter tip position was easily identified for all patients. In conclusion, this first report on peritoneal MRI using only dialysate as the "contrast medium" indicates that MRI permits detailed observation of all relevant, PD-related, abdominal pathologic features against the dialysate background, thus avoiding system contamination (and thus the risk of peritonitis).
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of the peritoneal cavity among peritoneal dialysis patients, using the dialysate as "contrast medium". 1175 38
A 26-year-old nulliparous woman underwent a laparoscopy to remove a 10-cm endometrial cyst on the left ovary (type II Nezhat). The cyst was extracted from the 10-mm umbilical incision; the other 2 trocars were inserted through 5-mm incisions. One year later, in correspondence to the previous 5-mm incision site, a
hernia
occurred that contained omentum and was reduced easily with a local anesthetic. After 2 years of good health, an aching nodule occurred on the same trocar site; vaginal ultrasound examination showed another left
ovarian cyst
. A second laparoscopy was performed; the cyst was very adherent and was removed in fragments. The wall nodule was removed, and the histologic examination classified it as endometriosis.
...
PMID:Incisional hernia on the 5-mm trocar port site and subsequent wall endometriosis on the same site: a case report. 1615 Feb 94
We report all the procedures performed in pregnant patients in our institute. There were 2 cases of laparoscopic mesh repair (for posterolateral diaphragmatic Bochdalek
hernia
and laparoscopic Heller cardiomyotomy) and 1 laparoscopic cystectomy for torsion of an
ovarian cyst
; 7 laparoscopic appendectomies (6 for acute appendicitis and 1 for perforated appendix); and 9 laparoscopic cholecystectomies (8 for acute cholecystitis and 1 for gallbladder empyema). All these patients were in their second trimester of pregnancy. All the laparoscopic procedures were successful: there was no mortality, morbidity, or conversions. There were no complications for either mother or child related to general anesthesia. The changes in physiology of the pregnant patient have to be adequately addressed and proper precautions taken to ensure safety. The second trimester is the ideal time to do laparoscopic surgery, though procedures have been performed in all trimesters. Our initial experience is satisfactory, although more data are essential to standardize laparoscopic procedures in pregnancy. We conclude that laparoscopic surgery is proving to be as safe as open surgery in pregnancy.
...
PMID:Safety and efficacy of laparoscopic surgery in pregnancy: experience of a single institution. 1748 45
With advances in noninvasive fetal diagnostic tools, such as ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging, the percentage of neonatal surgical patients detected antenatally has increased. Recently, color Doppler as well as 3D imaging has contributed to more accurate diagnoses with ultrasonography. The significance of antenatal diagnosis for neonatal surgical disease and the current progress in fetal surgery are described and discussed. At present, congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
with extremely severe hypoplastic lung, congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation with hydrops, obstructive uropathy with oligohydramnios, and simple
ovarian cyst
greater than 5cm in diameter are considered to be appropriate indications for fetal surgery.
...
PMID:[Antenatal diagnosis of neonatal surgical diseases]. 1805 74
Right lower quadrant (RLQ) pain is a common complaint in children presenting at emergency departments. This study analyzed the etiologies of RLQ pain, and compared the clinical presentations, laboratory test results and imaging findings in patients with appendicitis with those in other groups of patients. We also investigated if active observation resulted in delayed diagnosis, to the detriment of patients. Medical records for the period January 2006 to July 2006 were reviewed for children (age < 18 years) who presented to the emergency department of one medical center, complaining of RLQ pain. Out of a total of 100 patients (age range: 2-17 years; mean: 11 years), 46 patients presented with only one symptom of RLQ pain, while 32 patients had >/= 2 associated signs or symptoms, including fever, nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, or rebound tenderness. Imaging studies, including abdominal sonography and/or computed tomography, were performed in 73 patients; 44 underwent surgery for presumed appendicitis and one received surgery for a right paraduodenal
hernia
. Eleven patients underwent surgery because of peritoneal signs, and eight because of persistent or aggravated RLQ pain. Postoperative pathologic examinations revealed 53 cases of appendicitis, six normal appendices, and other morbidities (1 perforated peptic ulcer, 1 pelvic inflammatory disease, 1
ovarian cyst
, 1 diverticulitis, and 1 right paraduodenal
hernia
). Thirty-three patients were discharged after several hours of observation (range: 0.5-18 hours; mean: 4 hours), and three patients were admitted for further observations. All were discharged without operation. There were significant differences in the incidences of fever (p = 0.004) and rebound tenderness (p = 0.019), and in white cell counts (p < 0.001), neutrophil percentages (p < 0.001), and C-reactive protein levels (p < 0.001) between patients with appendicitis and patients with other causes of RLQ pain. Clinical signs and symptoms, laboratory tests, and imaging studies can be used to differentiate between the causes of RLQ pain. Patients without the classical features of appendicitis or peritonitis can be safely managed by active observation and repeated physical examinations.
...
PMID:Children presenting at the emergency department with right lower quadrant pain. 1928 11
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