Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0021933 (intussusception)
3,822 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five cases of lymphosarcoma of the bowel in Nigerian Igbo children are presented. They were found to be similar to an Australian series in the following respects: boys were more commonly affected than girls; affected children were all aged over two years; and the two main modes of presentation were intussusception and a localized abdominal mass. Unlike Australian children, Nigerian Igbos did not present with features suggestive of acute appendicitis.
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PMID:Comparative study of bowel lymphosarcoma in childhood. 57 98

A case of intussusception of the appendix caused by an adenovillous papilloma in the appendix is reported. The condition was combined with acute appendicitis. The different clinical pictures are described. Due to the varied symptoms the diagnosis of intussusception of the appendix is rarely made preoperatively. The aetiology is briefly discussed. The treatment is operative with removal of the appendix or an appropriate resection.
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PMID:Intussusception of the appendix caused by an adenovillous papilloma. 96 88

Twelve children with abdominal complaints had lymphoid hyperplasia of the bowel presenting in an acute or chronic form. The etiology is obscure. An infectious process is thought to precipitate the acute form of the disease. Parasites were identified in two patients with the chronic disease. The acute form, with involvement of the appendix or terminal ileum, presents commonly as acute appendicitis. Because of its self-limiting nature, appendectomy with perservation of the terminal ileum is appropriate. When intussusception is present, resection of the ileum is advisable. The chronic form, which is also common in the terminal ileum, produces disabling symptoms, recurrent intussusception, chronic anemia, and weight loss and is, therefore, amenable to surgical resection.
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PMID:Lymphoid hyperplasia of the bowel and its surgical significance in children. 100 12

Acute hydrops of the gallbladder (AHGB) is a rare paediatric disease being diagnosed with increased frequency due to its association with other illnesses and the availability of ultrasonography. The symptoms and signs of AHGB include abdominal pain, vomiting, abdominal mass and/or tenderness. As these clinical features mimic the more common surgical conditions such as acute appendicitis, intussusception and volvulus, some cases are still diagnosed only at laparotomy. Diagnosis is established by ultrasonography of the abdomen demonstrating normal biliary ducts and a distended gallbladder without calculi or congenital malformation. The aetiology of acute hydrops of the gallbladder is unknown but may be multifactorial. Treatment varies from non-operative management to surgical intervention.
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PMID:Acute hydrops of the gallbladder in childhood. 139 81

During the last decade neonatal surgical results have improved considerably. Except for infants born with serious congenital heart disease, diaphragmatic hernia or exomphalos, postoperative mortality rates for infants with single anomalies have fallen to the region of 10%. This dramatic success story has been marred by a corresponding increase in the number of individuals with several anomalies entering late childhood with severe chronic handicaps. During the remainder of this century much effort will be expended in devising programmes of investigation which will attempt to predict which individuals will have a poor long-term prognosis. Such programmes will necessitate very close liaison between obstetricians, radiologists, neonatologists, local paediatricians, paediatric surgeons, general practitioners and parents. Very urgent surgery is necessary for the best results in infants with gastroschisis, intestinal volvulus and irreducible inguinal hernia, but for most other conditions there have been recent trends away from very urgent surgery to operation during daylight hours within the ensuing 24 h. Surgery within a few hours of presentation is necessary for intussusception and for early acute appendicitis, but perforated appendicitis should be treated by aggressive fluid replacement and intravenous antibiotics and surgery should be contemplated only in the rare cases of continued deterioration.
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PMID:Paediatric emergencies. 176 28

The clinicopathological features of schistosomiasis of the appendix are discussed, based on the clinical presentation, operative findings and morphological changes in the specimens of patients seen in Ibadan between 1980 and 1989. Schistosoma haematobium was implicated as the causal agent of a granulomatous inflammatory reaction with eosinophilia and fibrosis. Intramuscular oviposition was associated with frank acute appendicitis, and serosal involvement resulted in peritoneal adhesions, with ileoileal intussusception in one patient. The actual role of schistosomal infestation as a contributory factor in appendicitis is still open to debate, but the diagnosis must be entertained in patients in the tropics with features of acute appendicitis or recurrent abdominal pain.
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PMID:Schistosomiasis of the appendix. 195 89

With the continuing advancement in the treatment of childhood leukemia and the lengthened survival of these patients, an increased incidence of abdominal complications has been observed. A retrospective analysis of 364 patients with leukemia treated at the National Taiwan University Hospital from January 1977 through April 1988 was undertaken. Eleven patients (3.0%) developed abdominal complications during their course of disease, including acute appendicitis, intussusception, intestinal perforation, ovarian cyst rupture, etc. All of these patients had abdominal complications during the initial presentation or relapse of leukemia, and 9 (82%) of them had just received chemotherapy. Ten patients (91%) had thrombocytopenia and 7 (64%) had leukopenia. Blood cultures were positive in 5 patients (45%), and gram-negative enteric bacilli were isolated in 4 of them. All 5 septicemic patients had leukopenia or neutropenia. The clinical manifestations were nonspecific and were often masked. Most of the complications occurred in the right lower abdominal structures. Of the 7 children treated surgically, 3 had long term survival. Among the 4 patients who did not receive an operation, only 1 survived for more than 4 weeks. The mean length of survival tended to be longer in patients with additional surgical treatment. Prompt diagnosis and early aggressive treatment, under modern supportive facilities, appear to offer a more favorable outcome.
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PMID:Acute abdomen in childhood leukemia. 197 4

The work analyses 455 patients with acute adhesive intestinal obstruction (194 children with the early and 261 with the advanced stage of the disease). The most common causes of the obstruction were acute appendicitis, developmental anomalies of the intestine, and intestinal intussusception. Complete viscerolysis and horizontal intestinoplication by means of medical glue without application of sutures were performed in a total adhesion process, even in the acute period (34 cases). Severe paresis or paralysis of the gastrointestinal tract is an indication for its decompression. Laparoscopy was conducted in 90 children (from 3 months to 14 years of age) in suspected acute adhesive intestinal obstruction. The diagnosis was confirmed or defined more exactly in 64 patients. As the result of endoscopic operations intestinal obstruction was corrected and laparotomy was avoided in almost half of the patients. The total mortality was 1.3%.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of adhesive intestinal obstruction in children]. 214 69

Ultrasonography offers direct imaging of the bowel wall and allows dynamic evaluation of peristalsis. It helps to differentiate eosinophilic gastroenteritis from regional enteritis and lymphoma, displays a typical appearance in intussusception and is quite specific in the afferent loop syndrome, closed-loop obstruction and lymphedema. It may be helpful in ischemia of the bowel and in the evaluation of acute appendicitis.
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PMID:Current status of small-bowel ultrasound. 219 34

During a 4-month period, high-resolution ultrasonography (US) was used to prospectively evaluate 70 children with clinically suspected acute appendicitis. Thirty-five US scans showed a noncompressible appendix with maximal outer diameters greater than 6 mm. This finding was considered positive for the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Thirty-one of these 35 patients had acute appendicitis documented by surgical and pathologic findings. The remaining four patients were observed, and their symptoms resolved. Thirty-five patients had US scans considered negative for appendicitis. Seventeen of these patients had US findings positive for other conditions including mesenteric adenitis, ileitis, intussusception, Crohn disease, and Burkitt lymphoma. In this series US enabled diagnosis of acute appendicitis with a sensitivity of 94%, a specificity of 89%, and a predictive accuracy of 91%. Diagnosis of acute appendicitis can be made with US with the same accuracy in children as has been previously reported in series of adult patients. The use of US in clinically ambiguous cases may allow earlier diagnosis, prevention of perforation, and decreased complications in the pediatric patient with acute appendicitis.
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PMID:Acute appendicitis in children: evaluation with US. 219 94


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