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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
First cause of secondary hypertension is renovascular
hypertension
which presents abdominal bruit in 16 to 20% of cases. This clinical sign is also associated with other vascular disease of the abdomen such as celiac trunk stenosis and/or aneurysms located on the pancreaticoduodenal or gastroduodenal arcs level, with little representation among aneurysm. They usually appear on a context of digestive complications like neoplasias, chronic pancreatitis or gastric obstructions possibly with obstructive icterus, hemorrhage and
acute abdomen
episodes. Its presentation in other contexts is rare and constitutes a diagnostic challenge. Diagnosis is made by abdominal arteriography which is the best method because you can locate the problem as well as intervene therapeutically with embolization of the aneurysme. We would like to emphasize the importance of a quick diagnosis due to the risk of rupture and the high morbi-mortality associated.
...
PMID:[Abdominal bruit associated with hypertension]. 1521 82
This report describes how a rare condition in pregnancy can present with features resembling more common diagnoses in the unwell obstetric patient. Our patient presented in late pregnancy initially with clinical features similar to mild preeclampsia, with proteinuric
hypertension
, epigastric pain and mildly deranged liver function tests. She went on to develop signs of
acute abdomen
associated with a persistent tachycardia and hypotension; there was evidence of fetal compromise. Following resuscitation, emergency caesarean section was performed and evolved into a laparotomy. The diagnosis was not clear clinically at this stage, but a retrospective amylase sample suggested acute pancreatitis. There was no clinical evidence of biliary perforation, but ongoing clinical suspicion prompted a CT of the abdomen. This proved unhelpful and our diagnostic dilemma was only resolved by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, which demonstrated a biliary leak. A stent was placed with subsequent improvement in the patient's condition. With anaesthetists increasingly involved in the multi-disciplinary management of acutely sick obstetric patients, our case highlights the need for every practitioner involved in such cases to assess each individual fully, and be constantly aware that the diagnosis might not be obvious.
...
PMID:Spontaneous common bile duct rupture in pregnancy. 1579 53
Dysplasia of the renal and cervical arteries are well known, but dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) is less frequent and has specific presentation. There have been few reports on the different types of presentations. We report a series of 38 cases and present the characteristic features together with a comparison with data in the literature. These non-atheromatous non-inflammatory lesions of the arterial wall occurred either in a context of fibromuscular disease which cause is unknown (30/38 patients) or in patients with genetic disease such as neurofibromatosis (3/38) or Ehlers-Danlos disease (5/38). The fibromuscular disease presented three aspects with specific characteristics. a) stenosing lesions found predominantly in women with a different morphology than in the other localization (usually associated): irregular diffuse stenosis discovered in patients with
hypertension
, or ischemic digestive symptoms (6/14 patients). b) Aneurysms, also found predominantly in women, but less frequently associated with other dysplasias. These aneurysms were generally sacciform. Unlike data in the literature, our series only included rupture in 1/8 cases. The aneurysm was discovered during the exploration of abdominal pain or
hypertension
. c) The third type of fibromuscular disease concerned dissections which were observed in the male population, (except one case of segmental dysplasia), and presented with signs of digestive ischemia in the other seven patients, four in an emergency context requiring immediate treatment. Two genetic diseases were observed. a) Neurofibromatosis led to dysplasia analogous to fibromuscular disease, but with abnormal nerve formations in the wall. For the three cases observed, one involved only the visceral arteries and the two others thoraco-abdominal coarctation. b) We had five patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, with dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery. For three there was a fusiform dilatation and in one small aneurysms along the arterial trunk, which only required surveillance. There was only one aneurysm which required treatment by resection and venous graft. In these young patients, revascularization was generally achieved with autologous material and the prognosis was favorable. Embolization was successful in treating the sacciform aneurysm in one patient. In conclusion, dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery has a specific presentation which must be recognized to enable diagnosis of this not uncommon condition in young subjects (even children) who often present with an
acute abdomen
requiring urgent treatment.
...
PMID:[Thirty-eight cases of dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery]. 1614 79
Because pregnancy is rare in women with end-stage renal disease, dialysis patients have not been reported to present with acute abdominal symptoms related to pregnancy including ectopic pregnancy. A 41-year-old woman treated with hemodialysis for over 18 years was brought to the emergency room at our institution because of acute abdominal pain. Ultrasonography detected an abdominal fluid collection, and her anemia had worsened (hematocrit 18%). Emergency laparoscopic exploration disclosed a hemorrhagic corpus luteum of pregnancy, causing ovarian bleeding on the left. Coagulation of bleeding points was carried out. At this time, pregnancy at 7 weeks of gestation was discovered. After the procedures, hemodialysis frequency was increased to 5 times weekly, and an erythropoietin derivative was administered to maintain a hematocrit above 30%. The patient developed no
hypertension
. At 33 weeks of gestation, cesarean section was performed because of a decrease in amniotic fluid and frequent late deceleration of the fetal heart rate. A live baby girl weighing 1,422 g was born. The successful pregnancy reflects remarkable progress in dialysis technology. Pregnancy, then, can underlie an
acute abdomen
in childbearing-age women (14 - 44 years old) undergoing long-term dialysis.
...
PMID:A patient with pregnancy-related acute abdomen after hemodialysis for over 18 years. 1928 51
Remodeling by its very nature implies synthesis and degradation of extracellular matrix components (such as elastin, collagen, and connexins). Most of the vascular matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) are latent because of the presence of constitutive nitric oxide (NO). However, during oxidative stress peroxinitrite (ONOO-) activates the latent MMPs and instigates vascular remodeling. Interestingly, in mesenteric artery, homocysteine (Hcy) decreases the NO bio-availability, and folic acid (FA, an Hcy-lowering agent) mitigates the Hcy-mediated mesentery artery dysfunction. Dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase-2 (DDAH-2) and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) increases NO production. The hypothesis was that the Hcy decreased NO bio-availability, in part, activating MMP, decreasing elastin, DDAH-2, eNOS and increased vasomotor response by increasing connexin. To test this hypothesis,the authors used 12-week-old C57BJ/L6 wild type (WT) and hyperhomocysteinemic (HHcy)-cystathione beta synthase heterozygote knockout (CBS+/-) mice. Blood pressure measurements were made by radio-telemetry. WT and MMP-9 knockout mice were administered with Hcy (0.67 mg/ml in drinking water). Superior mesenteric artery and mesenteric arcade were analyzed with light and confocal microscopy. The protein expressions were measured by western blot analysis. The mRNA levels for MMP-9 were measured by RT-PCR. The data showed decreased DDAH-2 and eNOS expressions in mesentery in CBS-/+ mice compared with WT mice. Immuno-fluorescence and western blot results suggest increased MMP-9 and connexin-40 expression in mesenteric arcades of CBS-/+ mice compared with WT mice. The wall thickness of third-order mesenteric artery was increased in CBS-/+ mice compared to WT mice. Hcy treatment increased blood pressure in WT mice. Interestingly, in MMP-9 KO, Hcy did not increase blood pressure. These results may suggest that HHcy causes mesenteric artery remodeling and narrowing by activating MMP-9 and decreasing DDAH-2 and eNOS expressions, compromising the blood flow, instigating
hypertension
, and
acute abdomen
pain.
...
PMID:Mesenteric vascular remodeling in hyperhomocysteinemia. 2107 54
Pheochromocytoma is a tumor of the chromaffin cells which secretes catecholamines and 90% of it originates from adrenal medulla. The main symptoms and signs are
hypertension
, tachycardia, sweating and headache. Rarely,
acute abdomen
may occur as a result of the rupture of tumoral mass or bleeding inside the mass. Here we present a 43 year old male patient who applied with acute abdominal syndrome and severe
hypertension
. Abdominal MRI showed a large mass hemorrhagic in nature above the right kidney. At laparotomy, ruptured adrenal mass was seen and excised successfully. The histological evaluation confirmed the diagnosis as pheochromocytoma. Ruptured adrenal pheochromocytoma is a mortal situation potentially and it should be considered in patients who present with an acute abdominal syndrome and
hypertension
or shock. It should be known that early diagnosis and surgery with proper preoperative treatment is a life saver.
...
PMID:A rare cause of acute abdomen: ruptured adrenal pheochromocytoma. 2133 8
The Authors report a case of abdominal compartment syndrome due to a giant ovarian serous cystadenoma. Despite of the relief of intra-abdominal
hypertension
(IAP: 16 mmHg), mild symptomatology (clinostatic dyspnea) lead to defer the emergency surgical treatment; after CT scan of abdomen and pelvis was performed a resection en bloc of the cystic mass, oophorectomy and cholecystectomy. However it seems advisable to perform an emergency laparotomy in patients with abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) grade II when presenting as an
acute abdomen
.
...
PMID:Abdominal compartment syndrome due to a giant multilobulated ovarian serous cystadenoma. Case report and review of the literature. 2261 39
The authors report a case of atherosclerotic stroke in a 46-year-old recreational bodybuilder with a 20 year history of anabolic-adrenergic steroid (AAS) abuse. Cerebrovascular accident (CVA) occurred during his third week of hospital admission for an
acute abdomen
and on day 8, postemergency laparotomy. CVA presented with collapse, generalised seizures, reduced Glasgow Coma Score and severe
hypertension
. He was subsequently admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), where initial investigations did not illustrate an underlying diagnosis. By day 4 in ICU, there had been no significant clinical improvement and radiological investigations were repeated, identifying a left frontal lobe infarct in the middle cerebral artery territory. The authors propose CVA was secondary to AAS. After a prolonged and complicated period of rehabilitation, he has been discharged home; he requires carers due to dyspraxia and is mobilising independently.
...
PMID:Delayed diagnosis of a cerebrovascular accident associated with anabolic steroid use. 2820 81
Three cases of acute intermittent porphyria are reported. While in first case severe pain in abdomen with intermittent exacerbation was the only presentation, the second patient presented as accelerated
hypertension
and acute abdominal crises in whom the clinical course was characterized by development of deep coma due to inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone before she made complete recovery. The third patient, initially manifested as acute encephalitic syndrome. After initial improvement, she developed features of acute intermittent porphyria i.e.
acute abdomen
, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and rapidly progressing acute motor neuropathy leading to respiratory and bulbar paralysis. In addition, she developed severe and fluctuating dysautonomia leading to cardiac arrest and fatal termination. The importance of early diagnosis, recognition of autonomic disturbances, prompt treatment and counseling for avoidance of precipitating factors is stressed.
...
PMID:Acute intermittent porphyria with SIADH and fluctuating dysautonomia. 2313 86
Abdominal apoplexy, the spontaneous hemorrhage into the peritoneal cavity, is usually caused by a rupture of visceral vessels such as short gastric arteries. Several factors such as pregnancy,
hypertension
and atherosclerosis have been described in association with abdominal apoplexy. Blunt trauma, inflammatory conditions, aneurysm rupture and rarely vomiting are some predisposing conditions. We report a very unusual case of a patient who had a spontaneous short gastric artery acute hemoperitoneum caused by forceful gagging during teeth brushing. The patient was treated with blood transfusion, fluids resuscitation, laparotomy, and suture ligation of the bleeder vessel. We also review the medical literature of abdominal apoplexy, a rare etiology of
acute abdomen
that should be recognized early in the Emergency Department.
...
PMID:Short gastric artery apoplexy after gagging. 2319 60
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