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Query: UMLS:C0021843 (bowel obstruction)
9,927 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During pregnancy, intestinal obstruction due to sigmoid volvulus is extremely rare. Only 73 cases have been reported. A 24-year-old black woman, gravida 2, para 1, presented during Week 36 of an otherwise uneventful pregnancy, with intermittent abdominal pain and constipation, and no history of nausea, vomiting, fever, chills, previous medical problems, or prior abdominal surgery. Her previous pregnancy was a spontaneous vaginal delivery of a normal full-term neonate. On examination, she was afebrile, with abdominal tenderness. Laboratory studies revealed elevated WBC count of 13,500. She was admitted and given a Fleet enema, with no result or change in abdominal pain. Pain worsened; reexamination of her cervix revealed 3 cm dilation. After Pitocin augmentation, a viable male infant with Apgars of 7 and 9 was delivered. Postpartum, abdominal pain continued, with worsening abdominal distention. Radiograph revealed a massively distended colon. Physical examination 12 hours postdelivery indicated peritonitis. Exploratory laparotomy revealed volvulated, gangernous, massively distended sigmoid colon. The sigmoid colon was resected and Hartmann's colostomy performed. She was discharged on postoperative Day 4. Sigmoid volvulus complicating pregnancy is an uncommon and potentially devastating development that should be suspected with worsening abdominal pain and evidence of bowel obstruction. Prompt intervention is necessary to minimize maternal and fetal morbidity.
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PMID:Sigmoid volvulus in pregnancy. 861 67

We report herein the rare case of a 26-year-old woman who developed a small-bowel obstruction caused by a medication "bezoar" or enterolith, following the long-term ingestion of magnesium oxide cathartics for constipation. Medication bezoars resulting from laxatives or cathartics have rarely been reported and we were only able to find two other such cases in the literature.
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PMID:Small bowel obstruction caused by a medication bezoar: report of a case. 868 Jan 27

Patients with trisomy 21 have a higher incidence of several gastrointestinal anomalies. However, the coexistence of imperforate anus, Hirschsprung's disease, and trisomy 21 had not been reported previously. This report describes the case of an infant girl born with trisomy 21 and imperforate anus, without a fistula, who presented with bowel obstruction 3 months after anoplasty. The obstruction was attributable to Hirschsprung's disease. This was managed by a leveling colostomy in the descending colon, followed by an endorectal pull-through after 4 weeks. She has a normal stooling pattern 11 months after colostomy closure. Hirschsprung's disease should be suspected in infants with trisomy 21 who have constipation after repair of imperforate anus. The authors believe that the endorectal pull-through is the safest technique to use for Hirschsprung's disease after a previous anoplasty.
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PMID:Hirschsprung's disease, imperforate anus, and Down's syndrome: a case report. 878 95

The treatment of nonpain symptoms is integral to good palliative care of the terminally ill elder. This article reviews the management of common physical symptoms observed during the dying process, including nausea and vomiting, dyspnea, cough, constipation, diarrhea, bowel obstruction, and xerostomia. Alleviation of these symptoms is necessary for a comfortable and tranquil death for the patient, and an uncomplicated bereavement for surviving family members.
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PMID:Nonpain symptom management in terminal care. 879 50

Fibrosing colonopathy is a recently described complication of cystic fibrosis, of unknown aetiology but possibly related to treatment with high-dose pancreatic enzyme supplements. We have used a whole gut perfusion technique to study subclinical gut inflammation in cystic fibrosis patients; concentrations of haemoglobin, IgG, albumin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, granulocyte elastase, IL1 beta, and IL8 were measured in whole gut lavage fluid: 23 tests were performed in 17 children with cystic fibrosis (20 elective tests, three lavages to treat distal intestinal obstruction syndrome (DIOS)). None has had fibrosing or haemorrhagic colitis. There were 12 tests in control children with constipation or precolonoscopy. Moderately abnormal results were obtained for many of the parameters studied, in specimens from all the cystic fibrosis children; however there were no significant differences between tests on high-dose and low-dose enzyme supplements of the same brand in the five children who had duplicate tests performed electively. The lavage fluid specimens from two cystic fibrosis children were strikingly abnormal in all tests apart from haemoglobin and alpha-1-antitrypsin. These were two of the three children with DIOS, and were also the only cases in the series taking Nutrizym 22. These data suggest that the majority of cystic fibrosis children, including those on high-dose enzyme supplements, do not have clinically significant colitis, but that there is subclinical mucosal inflammation in a minority (two of 17 in this series), for which DIOS and/or Nutrizym 22 treatment may be risk factors. Alternatively, inflammation and dysmotility in the proximal colon may be directly produced by a drug or other agent, producing a clinical syndrome indistinguishable from DIOS. Tests for indices of inflammation in gut lavage fluid offer a new approach to the detection and measurement of iatrogenic intestinal and colonic injury.
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PMID:Direct assessment of gastrointestinal inflammation and mucosal immunity in children with cystic fibrosis. 886 80

For the patient with advanced pancreatic cancer, curative strategies may not be appropriate, and palliative symptom management may be the best approach to patient care. Oncologists, who have been trained to concentrate on curing cancer, must shift focus when caring for these patients and consider palliative treatment strategies. Pancreatic cancer patients are multisymptomatic and may require treatment for such conditions as pain, bowel obstruction, anorexia, early satiety, cachexia, nausea and vomiting, constipation, diarrhea, ascites, and dyspnea, among others. These patients may be most effectively managed in a hospice care center, which can provide comprehensive care. Alternatively, new programs, such as the Cleveland Clinic Palliative Care Program, provide a unique setting for the patient with advanced cancer that integrates the qualities of hospice care into the acute medical care system.
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PMID:Palliative management of the patient with advanced pancreatic cancer. 888 9

A study of one hundred and forty-two patients with acute intestinal obstruction over a period of ten years (January 1985-December 1994) at Wesley Guild Hospital was undertaken to determine the pattern and outcome of this problem in a tropical African population. There was a preponderance of males over females; ratio 1.7:1. Mean age was 33 years and over half of the patients were aged between two and 30 years. There was a second peak age incidence among elderly patients between 50-80 years. Abdominal pain, vomiting and constipation were common symptoms, while abdominal distension and tenderness were common clinical findings. Intraperitoneal adhesions were responsible in 41.5%; there was associated intestinal volvulus in 25.4% of the cases of intraperitoneal adhesions. In 16.9%, strangulated external hernia was responsible for acute intestinal obstruction. Small intestinal volvulus was encountered in 20 cases (14.1%) and associated with adhesion in 75% of the cases. Intussusception occurred in 14.1% of cases of which 70% of the patients were below the age of 15 years. In 15 (10.6%) patients, there were volvulus of the sigmoid colon, with 80% (12 patients) having gangrenous bowel segments. Ascaris were responsible in 3.5% of the patients and large bowel tumour in 2.8%. Other rare causes were internal hernia and ileal pseudo obstruction. Adhesiolysis and intestinal resection were the commonest operative procedures. Common complications were wound infection in 16.2%, postoperative fever in 10.6% and chest infection in 9.1%. A mortality rate of 8.4% was recorded.
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PMID:Changing pattern of acute intestinal obstruction in a tropical African population. 899 63

Sigmoid volvulus is an unusual cause of intestinal obstruction in children. We report two cases of sigmoid volvulus as a complication of segmental dilatation of the colon occurring in two girls (5 years old and 9 years old) previously treated for chronic constipation. In both cases the constipation had been recognised since the neonatal period mimicking a Hirschsprung's disease, a diagnosis which has been excluded after rectal biopsy. The delayed diagnosis of segmental dilatation of the sigmoid colon followed the volvulus. Segmental colonic resection resulted in both cases in the cure of the constipation.
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PMID:Volvulus of the sigmoid colon as a complication of segmental dilatation of the colon. Report of 2 cases. 900 77

Constipation and fecal impaction are common disorders with multiple treatment options. We describe the use of GoLytely oral solution in 10 patients admitted to a community hospital and referred to a single gastroenterologist for fecal impaction refractory to conventional medical treatment. Seven women and three men received enemas, bisacodyl suppositories, and digital fragmentation either solely or in combination prior to the administration of GoLytely oral solution. The patients had no clinical and radiological evidence of bowel obstruction. All had underlying cardiovascular problems. Their mean age was 78.1 years (range 49-100 years). GoLytely oral solution (Braintree Laboratories, Inc.) was administered at a rate of 100 ml/hr per orem to three patients, via nasogastric tube in six patients, and via gastrostomy tube in one patient. All 10 patients were able to regularly pass feces and show radiographical colorectal clearing within 6.0 to 57.25 hr (mean 23.60 hr). No significant complications were observed. Eight patients were discharged from the hospital within 24 hr of termination of treatment while two patients remained for unrelated medical conditions. GoLytely oral solution effectively relieved fecal impaction in 10 patients refractory to conventional medical treatment.
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PMID:Use of oral GoLytely solution in relief of refractory fecal impaction. 924 46

A 72-year-old man presented with constipation of 45 days' duration, with history suggestive of recurrent episodes of subacute intestinal obstruction relieved by passage of fluid and flatus; he had noticed an abdominal lump 30 days prior. Examination revealed a lump corresponding to the contours of the entire large intestine. X-ray showed barium outlining the colon. Enquiry revealed that he had undergone a barium enema study 10 days prior to appearance of the lump. The diagnosis of barium inspissation was confirmed at laparotomy; total colectomy with ileo-rectal anastomosis was done.
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PMID:Colonic chemobezoar--intestinal obstruction due to barium inspissation. 924 91


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