Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (irritable bowel syndrome)
8,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To understand the content of ambulatory family practice and find effective ways to improve clinical service, education and research in the Department of Family Medicine of Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital, we surveyed 14,064 patients from Jan. 1984 to Feb. 1991 and analysed (a) their basic demographic data including sex, age, insurance type, source and residential district and (b) clinical health problems covering 25,679 diagnoses and 148,994 diagnostic visits. Clinical health problems were recorded by the ICHPPC-2 code system. Results of basic demographic survey were as follow: 49.1% of patients was male and 50.9% female; 58.9% fell in the age group of 16-40 years and 22.4%, 12.0% and 6.7% of patients fell into the age groups of 41-65, under 16 and over 65 years respectively; 62.8% was insured usually by labor insurance and 26.9% had no insurance; the commonest referrals were other patients, colleagues, company personnel, doctors, media ... etc.; 58.8% lived in Kaohsiung City and 19.6% in Kaohsiung county. As for clinical health problems, the data showed that the commonest thirty diagnoses encountered at our clinic accounted for 69.3% of 25,679 diagnoses and the commonest ten diagnoses in descending order were medical health examination, acute URI, abdominal pain, uncomplicated hypertension, prophylactic immunization, hepatitis B carrier, back pain, anxiety disorder, viral hepatitis and irritable bowel syndrome. By calculating the average value of each diagnosis in a sample of 148,994 diagnostic visits to evaluate the habits of practice, we found that the commonest ten diagnostic visits at clinic in descending order were diabetes mellitus, hypertension involving target organ, uncomplicated hypertension, gout, hyperthyroidism, duodenal ulcer, tuberculosis, lipid metabolism disorder, other peptic ulcer and depressive disorders; all were chronic diseases. We concluded it was very important and helpful for the development of family medicine program and primary care unit to understand the content of their own ambulatory practice.
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PMID:[The content of ambulatory family practice in Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital]. 156 Apr 75

The autopsy report of Ludwig van Beethoven written by Dr Johann Wagner in 1827 reveals that he had renal calculi that had not been diagnosed during his lifetime, together with perirenal fibrosis. The most comprehensive interpretation of this autopsy finding is that the regular calcareous deposits in every one of his renal calices represented calcified necrotic papillae. Severe urinary obstruction or diabetes as possible causes of papillary necrosis were not present. Analgesic abuse because of headaches, back pain, and attacks of rheumatism or gout may be presumed on the basis of Beethoven's uncontrolled way of taking medication. Salicin, a commonly used analgesic substance of that time (dried and powdered willow bark), is able to cause papillary necrosis. Perirenal fibrosis may be due to chronic infection or drug intake. Beethoven's other well-known diseases are deafness caused by otosclerosis of the inner ear, relapsing attacks of diarrhea as the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome, and liver cirrhosis following viral hepatitis and chronic alcohol consumption. Liver cirrhosis also may cause papillary necrosis. In Beethoven's case, renal papillary necrosis was most probably the consequence of analgesic abuse together with decompensated liver cirrhosis. The autopsy report of Beethoven is the first case of papillary necrosis recorded in the literature.
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PMID:Beethoven's renal disease based on his autopsy: a case of papillary necrosis. 850 20

This article outlines the clinical management of common gastrointestinal disorders encountered in the primary care setting. The general assessment of a woman presenting with a gastrointestinal concern is reviewed. Diagnosis and management of acute and chronic diarrhea, constipation, irritable bowel syndrome, and anorectal disorders are covered with emphasis on client education. Gastroesophageal reflux disease and peptic ulcer disease is discussed with the latest treatment recommendations for Helicobacter pylori infection outlined. Diagnosis of gallbladder disease and gallstones with alternative treatment options is reviewed. Finally, the diagnosis and management of viral hepatitis is outlined. A case study is given to illustrate the basic principles needed by the nurse-midwife in the assessment, diagnosis, and management of a woman with a gastrointestinal concern.
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PMID:Primary care for women. Management and treatment of gastrointestinal disorders. 869 Dec 76

More and more patients are trying out herbal medicine. It is estimated that half of the population have used alternative products at least once in their live. Gastrointestinal diseases often require long-lasting treatments involving many side-effects that can impair the patient's motivation. The majority of persons with symptoms of the irritable bowel syndrome or chronic liver disease resort to non-conventional therapies. However, potential hepatotoxicity of herbal products should not be underestimated. In this article, we discuss herbal preparations in specific gastrointestinal and hepatological indications, concentrating on products that have been tested in randomized, controlled clinical trials. Effective symptomatic treatment of obstipation, irritable bowel and inflammatory bowel disease has been demonstrated with plant-derived preparations. On the other hand phytotherapeutic preparations can not be recommended at present for the treatment of cirrhosis or chronic viral hepatitis based on the available data.
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PMID:[Phytotherapeutic drugs in gastroenterology and hepatology]. 1212 81

Pseudopolyps are a frequent finding in the course of inflammatory bowel disease. They are non-neoplastic lesions resulting from a regenerative and healing process that leaves inflamed colonic mucosa in polypoid configuration. Data about their management is lacking. "Giant" pseudopolyps can be mistaken for adenocarcinomas and, as they rarely regress with medical management alone, a surgical resection is often required. A case ofgiantpseudopolyposis treated non-surgically, in a patient with concomitant ulcerative colitis and chronic hepatitis B, is reported, representing a co-morbidity complicating an eventual conservative treatment. The clinical implementation of topical budesonide was originally tested, resulting in clinical, endoscopic and histological remission. Budesonide seems a promising therapy for IBD, particularly when a comorbidity with viral hepatitis exist.
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PMID:Topical budesonide for treating giant rectal pseudopolyposis. 1608 May 51

The 12th Update in Gastroenterology and Hepatology for the Primary Care Practitioner is an annual course organized by the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at the University of California, Davis, and held in beautiful Monterey, California. The course was geared towards primary care physicians, nurse practitioners and other allied health professionals. The goals of this symposium were to provide current information regarding the diagnosis and management of digestive diseases commonly seen in the primary care setting and to provide practical guidelines for disease management. Topics covered during this symposium included viral hepatitis, alcoholic liver disease, hepatocellular carcinoma, dysphagia, gastroesophageal reflux disease, chronic diarrhea, inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, dyspepsia, gastroparesis and bariatric surgery. The course was organized into two sessions each morning, over 2 days, with three or four 30-min lectures. A brief question-and-answer session followed each lecture.
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PMID:12th Update in Gastroenterology and Hepatology for the Primary Care Practitioner. 1907 40

In opposition to opinions of a sectorialization of psychiatric illness, phenomena of comorbidity due to susceptibility of psychiatric patients to contract other diseases--whose co-presence is difficult to translate and treat--are more and more evident. In this review we have marked main issues of internal medicine in psychiatric patients. This review will discuss particularly main cardiovascular diseases (CAD, VTE), lung diseases (COPD,asthma, restrictive lung disease) gastroenterologic disease (IBS, coeliac disease, ulcerous rectocolitis), diabetes and metabolic syndrome, more likely infections verified in these patients (HIV, viral hepatitis), cancers considerably underlined (breast cancer, colon-rectal cancer and lung cancer), internistic issues in alcohol abuse which is a frequent state in these subjects. A special chapter is dedicated to antipsychotics. These drugs are characterized by a complex action modality and by frequent interactions with a large number of other drugs.
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PMID:Issues of internal medicine in psychiatric patients. 2104 55

Currently probiotics are considered as an emerging therapeutic strategy in the treatment of many liver disorders. The use of probiotics beyond infection of intestinal flora is a very helpful approach. The optimistic effect of probiotics has been observed in treating the hepatic cirrhosis, hepatic encephalopathy, viral hepatitis, irritable bowel syndrome, non-alcoholic fatty liver and alcoholic liver disease. The characterize mechanisms of probiotics are still unknown but may involve in, maintaining a microbial barrier against potential pathogens, reducing the production of bacterial toxins, modulating the immune system, intestinal permeability, and the inflammatory response. Its safety issues, effectiveness, food supplements as its source are still to be studied. However, studies revealed that probiotic therapy in hepatocellular carcinoma and in portal hypertension are still weak. Larger clinical studies are required before probiotics can be recommended as a treatment modality in liver diseases.
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PMID:REVIEW- Contemporary evidence on the dynamic role of probiotics in liver diseases. 3196 14