Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0021933 (
intussusception
)
3,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diagnosis is central to medicine. In spite of tremendous diagnostic technological advances, no infallible test exists and in the complex diagnostic process the physician may well get lost. The ultimate feedback on the accuracy of diagnosis is the autopsy. Five patients illustrate that the autopsy may disclose unexpected results. The first patient was a 9-year-old girl who suffered from daily abdominal spasmodic pain but each time recovered. She died suddenly; autopsy revealed intestinal
intussusception
. A 46-year-old man who was treated for hypertension developed pain in the chest and the lower back, but there were no other signs of myocardial infarction. He died suddenly; autopsy revealed a dissecting aortic aneurysm with rupture in the left pleural cavity. A 21-year-old woman, an excellent swimmer, drowned during a swim in the sea. Autopsy revealed severe widespread coronary disease with multiple myocardial infarction. A 32-year-old Surinam woman developed acute coma and died from cardiorespiratory arrest. At autopsy she had massive pulmonary embolism and generalized lymphadenopathy due to
sarcoidosis
. The last patient, a 32-year-old woman suffered from fatigue after her fourth child was born. She was admitted with severe dyspnoea and her chest X-ray showed interstitial fibrosis. She died presently and autopsy revealed metastatic colon carcinoma with pulmonary lymphangitis carcinomatosa. Systematic reviews of the results of autopsies show no decline in the percentage of false diagnoses and/or unexpected findings in spite of the enormous growth of the diagnostic armamentarium. Although we may radiologically 'slice' the body in incredible detail or investigate human cells at the molecular level, the autopsy has by no means become obsolete and is an invaluable tool for quality control and teaching.
...
PMID:[Truth after death]. 1059 Jul 70
A variety of disorders-including infectious, inflammatory, hereditary, and metabolic diseases-may affect both the brain and abdominal cavity, and the findings in one region may help establish the diagnosis or limit the differential diagnosis. Establishing an accurate early diagnosis enables clinicians to adequately manage these unusual diseases and potentially avert life-threatening complications. For example, an early diagnosis of Gardner syndrome enables annual sigmoid- or colonoscopy and ultrasonography. In many conditions, abdominal manifestations precede neurologic manifestations and may have prognostic significance. Patients with celiac disease more often present with abdominal manifestations such as duodenitis, slow transit time, reversal of the jejunal-ileal fold pattern, and transient small bowel
intussusception
than with intracranial manifestations. In other conditions, the neurologic manifestations may be the same as the presenting symptoms. For example, patients with Gardner syndrome may initially present with multiple mandibular or sinonasal osteomas. In addition,
sarcoidosis
may manifest with multifocal enhancing dural masses. Abdominal and neurologic manifestations may even occur simultaneously, as in several of the phakomatoses such as neurofibromatosis type 1, tuberous sclerosis complex, and von Hippel-Lindau syndrome. Ultimately, familiarity with the appearances of these conditions allows radiologists to pinpoint a diagnosis, even when imaging findings in either location are nonspecific.
...
PMID:Abdominal manifestations of neurologic disorders. 2332 34