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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Primary appendicitis presenting in a hernia sac is uncommon. Diagnosis depends on a high index of suspicion. The authors present a case report of a 65-year-old male with a two-day history of a painful irreducible right inguinal mass; he denied abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, fever, or chills.
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PMID:Case report: acute appendicitis in an inguinal hernia. 157 5

From a total of 2,146 oesophagojejunal and gastrojejunal anastomoses done between 1969 and June 1990, 7 patients (0.3%) were operated on for internal hernias. Six had developed their hernias after Billroth II gastrectomy with antecolic gastrojejunostomy and enteroanastomosis, and one patient after retrocolic Roux-en-Y reconstruction. The patients were operated on 5 days-27 years after their first operations. No patients developed internal hernias after simple gastrojejunostomy or after operations for malignant disease. Two patients died (29%) and three others developed complications. Five patients were thin. Treatment was delayed in most cases because of the nonspecific presentation of the condition. The diagnosis of internal hernia should be borne in mind in patients who develop abdominal pain with persistent nausea or vomiting after operation, so that prompt treatment may be instituted.
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PMID:Internal hernias after gastric operations. 168 46

Thirty-two patients with acute acalculous cholecystitis are presented. The age of the patients ranged from 1 to 80 years, with an average of 46.3 years. Acute acalculous cholecystitis occurred during the postoperative period in only four patients. Three patients were receiving total parenteral nutrition and 16 patients had one or more associated medical diseases. One patient had acute acalculous cholecystitis due to mechanical obstruction of the cystic duct caused by a diaphragmatic hernia. The most frequent signs and symptoms were right upper quadrant abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, fever, abdominal mass, and jaundice. All patients were subjected to cholecystectomy. Nine (28.1%) gallbladder specimens had gangrene. Pericholecystic perforation was observed in four patients (12.5%) free perforation in one patient (3.1%), and empyema of the gallbladder in one patient (3.1%). Bacteria were cultured from 18 of 24 bile specimens. E. coli was the most common organism isolated. The overall postoperative mortality and complication rates were 15.6% and 40.6% respectively. The average hospital stay was 16.4 days.
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PMID:Acute acalculous cholecystitis. 193 1

A patient with traumatic diaphragmatic hernia at right side was treated surgically. He was 63-year-old male. His illness was caused by a traffic accident one year ago. The major symptoms due to the injury were short breathness and pain at right lateral chest wall. One year later he complained of the nausea and abdominal discomfort. At the right thoracotomy, the herniation of liver and colon through the ruptured diaphragma was found. After the return of herniated organ into the abdominal space, ruptured diaphragma was closed directly.
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PMID:[A case of traumatic hernia of right diaphragma]. 230 52

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.
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PMID:[Acute torsion of greater omentum. Report of a case mimicking acute appendicitis]. 263 74

A twenty-seven-year-old 25 weeks gestation female was admitted with recurrent symptoms of nausea, vomiting and epigastric pain. She was diagnosed as left diaphragmatic hernia by chest X-ray film, CT and esophago-gastrography. During operation, a left central tendon defect was observed, and was 3.5 cm in diameter. The margin of the defect was smooth and round. It was associated with diaphragmatic eventration. The small intestine and transverse colon were herniated into the left thoracic cavity. The central tendon defect was closed with direct mattress sutures and was reinforced by overlap-technique of the diaphragm. To our knowledge, this type of defect has not been described previously in Japan. Diaphragmatic hernia in pregnancy is very rare, and presents abdominal pain, vomiting and dyspnea. Usually the diagnosis is achieved by chest X-ray film. However, esophago-gastrography should be added, if the diagnosis could not be confirmed by chest X-ray film. Conservative management is reported to bring high mortality, therefore, prompt surgical repair is advisable.
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PMID:[A case of congenital diaphragmatic hernia due to left central tendon defect in pregnancy]. 279 5

We present a case of delay in diagnosis of diaphragmatic rupture and herniation in a pregnant 25-year-old woman. The diaphragmatic rupture was secondary to trauma sustained five months prior to presentation. Subsequent to her accident, she was provided medical care on multiple occasions for symptoms of intractable nausea, vomiting, and weight loss that were probably related to an expanding uterus and diaphragmatic herniation of abdominal contents. At the time she presented to us the herniation had progressed and she was experiencing severe respiratory difficulty. A nasogastric tube was placed for diagnosis and decompression. A chest radiograph provided the diagnosis of herniation of gastrointestinal contents through the left hemidiaphragm. A healthy 5-lb boy was delivered vaginally and subsequently a left thoracotomy was performed for decompression and repair of the diaphragm. The patient's hospital course after hernia repair was uneventful.
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PMID:Delayed diagnosis of traumatic diaphragmatic hernia during pregnancy. 335 40

A case of an infradiaphragmatic bronchogenic cyst in an adult patient presenting with nausea, vomiting, and epigastric discomfort is reported. An upper gastrointestinal series showed a multiloculated cyst communicating with the stomach via a patent fistulous tract. At laparotomy the cyst was found to be connected to and communicating with the posterolateral portion of the stomach. The cyst was completely below the diaphragm and received its blood supply from a branch of the abdominal aorta. Histologically, the cyst was composed of smooth muscle, respiratory epithelium, cartilage, and submucous glands. A review of the literature reveals that this case of bronchogenic cyst was unique in that it was located entirely beneath the diaphragm, was not associated with a diaphragmatic hernia or other congenital anomaly, and maintained a patent communication with a portion of the gastrointestinal tract, ie, the stomach, reminiscent of its embryological development.
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PMID:Subdiaphragmatic bronchogenic cyst with communication to the stomach: a case report. 340 77

A 22-year-old man with an incarcerated left paraduodenal hernia is described. Symptoms included nausea, vomiting, cramp-like abdominal pain and obstipation. A clinical diagnosis of mechanical small-intestinal obstruction was made on the history, examination, and abdominal radiographic findings. At laparotomy successful manual reduction was achieved, resection was not required and the patient made an uneventful recovery.
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PMID:Left paraduodenal hernia with acute abdominal symptoms. A case report. 373 64

At the University of Minnesota under the supervision of one staff surgeon both jejunoileal bypass (JIB) and gastric bypass (GIB) operations have been performed for weight reduction in morbidly obese individuals. During the last 14 years 727 patients underwent end-to-end (40 to 4 cm) JIB and more than 570 patients underwent GIB. This report is based on a comparison of 205 JIBs performed between July 1975 and July 1979, 106 Alden-loop type GIBs (GIB-loop) performed between July 1975 and July 1979, 53 loop GIBs with enteroenterostomies between the limbs of the loop (GIB-EE) performed between May 1980 and May 1981, and 57 Roux-en-Y GIBs (GIB-Roux) performed between May 1981 and May 1982. Adequate weight loss occurred in 80% of the patients who returned for follow-up in all groups. The percentage of excess body weight loss was similar for the first year (65% for JIB, 62% for GIB-loop, 69% for GIB-EE, and 71% for GIB-Roux). The operative mortality and the immediate morbidity rates were uniformly low. The long-term complications for JIB were 37.7% arthralgia, 7.1% oxalate urolithiasis, 5.6% incisional hernia, and 1.4% liver failure. The complications for GIB-loop were 10.2% nausea/vomiting, 1.9% bile reflux gastritis, and 2.8% anastomotic problems; for GIB-EE 23% nausea/vomiting, 7% bile gastritis, 4.6% incisional hernia, and 3.7% anastomotic problems; and for GIB-Roux 16% nausea/vomiting and 1.7% anastomotic problems. The anastomotic problems consisted of afferent loop obstructions and stomal stenosis; there were no leaks. At 1 year plasma cholesterol reduction for JIB averaged 42% (p less than 0.001), GIB-loop 14% (p less than 0.001), GIB-EE 7% (NS), and GIB-Roux 17% (p less than 0.001). One year after operation 49% of 88 JIB patients showed progression of liver disease on sequential biopsy specimens and 20% improvement. In the 78 GIB patients with sequential biopsies, liver disease progressed in 8% and improved in 65%. In summary, comparable therapeutic weight reduction occurred with all the assessed procedures; however, the GIB-Roux was associated with far fewer serious long-term complications. At this time the GIB-Roux procedure is the weight reduction operation we recommend.
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PMID:Searching for the best weight reduction operation. 648 6


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