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

Ascariasis is a helminthic infection of global distribution with more than 1.4 billion persons infected throughout the world. The majority of infections occur in the developing countries of Asia and Latin America. Of 4 million people infected in the United States, a large percentage are immigrants from developing countries. Ascaris-related clinical disease is restricted to subjects with heavy worm load, and an estimated 1.2 to 2 million such cases, with 20,000 deaths, occur in endemic areas per year. More often, recurring moderate infections cause stunting of linear growth, cause reduced cognitive function, and contribute to existing malnutrition in children in endemic areas. Ascaris infection is acquired by the ingestion of the embryonated eggs. The larvae, while passing through the pulmonary migration phase for maturation, cause ascaris pneumonia. Intestinal ascaris is usually detected as an incidental finding. Ascaris-induced intestinal obstruction is a frequent complication in children with heavy worm loads. It can be complicated by intussusception, perforation, and gangrene of the bowel. Acute appendicitis and appendicular perforation can occur as a result of worms entering the appendix. HPA is a frequent cause of biliary and pancreatic disease in endemic areas. It occurs in adult women and can cause biliary colic, acute cholecystitis, acute cholangitis, acute pancreatitis, and hepatic abscess. RPC causing hepatic duct calculi is possibly an aftermath of recurrent biliary invasion in such areas. Ultrasonography can detect worms in the biliary tract and pancreas and is a useful noninvasive technique for diagnosis and follow-up of such patients. ERCP can help diagnose biliary and pancreatic ascariasis, including ascaris in the duodenum. Also, ERCP can be used to extract worms from the biliary and pancreatic ducts when indicated. Pyrantel pomoate, mebendazole, albendazole, and levamisole are effective drugs and can be used for mass therapy to control ascariasis in endemic areas.
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PMID:Ascariasis. 886 40

The round worm, Ascaris lumbricoides, is one of the largest of the parasites that infest the human bowel. The worms usually develop in the jejunum and can reach several thousand in number, causing bowel obstruction, volvulus, intussusception, appendicitis and even bowel perforation with penetration into the peritoneal cavity. They tend to invade the bile and pancreatic ducts and may cause acute cholecystitis and pancreatitis. Ascaris lumbricoides can be detected by sonography. This imaging modality can be helpful in diagnosing the presence of the worms and in evaluating response to treatment. We present an 18-month-old girl in whom bowel worms were detected by sonography.
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PMID:[Sonographic imaging of Ascaris lumbricoides]. 894 May 20

Leukemic and lymphomatous involvement of the appendix is rare and even rarer is its presentation as appendicitis. Burkitt's lymphoma is a high grade B-cell neoplasm. Its non-endemic form typically presents as abdominal mass in children. This rapidly growing tumour may cause symptoms due to mass effect or direct involvement of the bowel. Clinical presentations like acute abdomen can be secondary to intestinal obstruction, intussusception or sometimes perforation.We describe here a case of an adult male with an unusual presentation of appendiceal Burkitt's lymphoma mimicking acute cholecystitis or appendicitis.
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PMID:Primary Burkitt's Lymphoma Of The Appendix Presenting As Acute Abdomen: A Case Report. 2247 Jun 4

Angiogenesis in arterial intimal thickening (AIT) has been considered mainly in late AIT stages and only refers to sprouting angiogenesis. We assess angiogenesis during early AIT development and the occurrence of the intussusceptive type. For this purpose, we studied AIT development in (a) human arteries with vasculitis in gallbladders with acute cholecystitis and urgent (n = 25) or delayed (n = 20) cholecystectomy, using immunohistochemical techniques and (b) experimentally occluded arterial segments (n = 56), using semithin and ultrathin sections and electron microscopy. The results showed transitory angiogenic phenomena, with formation of an important microvasculature, followed by vessel regression. In addition to the sequential description of angiogenic and regressive findings, we mainly contribute (a) formation of intravascular pillars (hallmarks of intussusception) during angiogenesis and vessel regression and (b) morphological interrelation between endothelial cells (ECs) in the arterial wall and vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), which adopt a pericytic arrangement and establish peg-and-socket junctions with ECs. In conclusion, angiogenesis and vessel regression play an important role in AIT development in the conditions studied, with participation of intussusceptive angiogenesis during the formation and regression of a provisional microvasculature and with morphologic interrelation between ECs and VSMCs.
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PMID:Intussusceptive Angiogenesis and Peg-Socket Junctions between Endothelial Cells and Smooth Muscle Cells in Early Arterial Intimal Thickening. 3312 63