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:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 2-year prospective study with chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) (750 mg per day) was performed in 34 asymptomatic patients with radiolucent
gallstones
. 17 patients dropped out before completion of the trial. In 5 cases (29%) the stones dissolved and in 5 additional cases they decreased in size, while in 2 cases (13%) they increased in size during treatment. Favorable criteria for dissolution were round stones without edges and fissures on radiological appearance and a stone diameter of less than 1 cm. In 3 cases drug-induced
nausea
or diarrhea were so pronounced that treatment could not be continued. CDCA treatment also caused a significant rise in SGPT for at least one year. Thus, CDCA is at best moderately effective in a highly selective group of patients with
gallstones
.
...
PMID:[Dissolution of gallstones by chenodeoxycholic acid]. 33 70
Although oral cholecystography is a highly accurate investigation for the diagnosis of gallbladder disease, false normal examinations do occur. In other patients, the presence of jaundice,
nausea
, or vomiting may preclude oral cholecystography. When there is clinical suspicion of gallbladder disease with a normal or equivocal oral cholecystogram, ultrasound examination is a highly accurate alternative imaging procedure. We describe in this article three patients with apparently normal oral cholecystography who were found to have obvious
gallstones
on ultrasound examination and at surgery. The relative accuracy of these diagnostic procedures is reviewed and their place in the diagnosis of biliary tract disease is discussed.
...
PMID:Ultrasound and false normal oral cholecystogram. 67 99
The paper deals with the course of the illness in a 66 years old male, who had taken an amount of 0.2 mg of medigoxin for an unknown period of time, because of chronic heart failure due to atherosclerotic heart disease and chronic atrial fibrillation. He have had a
cholelithiasis
also and reduced renal reserve. He was admitted by an emergency admittance because of
nausea
, vomiting, color vision disturbances: blue colored vision, and with other signs of digitalis toxicity: diffuse abdominal pain, an absolute arrhythmia with a slow ventricular rate, and with a short corrected Q-T interval in an electrocardiogram of 0.315 seconds and with high serum digoxin level reacted 3.8 nmol/L. After stopping of a digitalis treatment, in a period of time of four days, all signs of digitalis toxicity including blue color vision disturbances disappeared. In the paper that rare sign of digitalis toxicity is discussed.
...
PMID:[Blue color vision as a sign of digitalis poisoning]. 134 44
The postoperative complaints of patients having been subjected to laparoscopic cholecystectomy have been studied. Residual
gallstones
involving clinical symptoms have not been observed. Right subcostal pain, meteorism, and
nausea
due to faulty diet showed a slight difference in favour of the laparoscopic method when compared to traditional surgery. The laparoscopic method was qualified as excellent by over 95 per cent of the patients.
...
PMID:Follow-up examinations of laparoscopic cholecystectomies. 134 81
The most certain symptomatic manifestation of
gallstones
is episodic upper abdominal pain. Characteristically, this pain is severe and located in the epigastrium and/or the right upper quadrant. The onset is relatively abrupt and often awakens the patient from sleep. The pain is steady in intensity, may radiate to the upper back, be associated with
nausea
and lasts for hours to up to a day. Dyspeptic symptoms of indigestion, belching, bloating, abdominal discomfort, heartburn and specific food intolerance are common in persons with
gallstones
, but are probably unrelated to the stones themselves and frequently persist after surgery. Many, if not most, persons with
gallstones
have no history of pain attacks. Persons discovered to have
gallstones
in the absence of typical symptoms appear to have an annual incidence of biliary pain of 2-5% during the initial years of follow-up, with perhaps a declining rate thereafter.
Gallstone
-related complications occur at a rate of less than 1% annually. Those whose stones are symptomatic at discovery have a more severe course, with approximately 6-10% suffering recurrent symptoms each year and 2% biliary complications. The far higher rates of symptom development reported in a few studies raise the possibility that these incidence estimates may be too low. The best predictors of future biliary pain are a history of pain at the time of diagnosis, female gender and possibly obesity. The risk of acute cholecystitis appears to be greater in those with large solitary stones, that of biliary pancreatitis in those with multiple small stones, and that of gallbladder cancer in those with large stones of any number. Drugs that inhibit the synthesis of prostaglandins may now be the treatment of choice in patients with
gallstones
who are suffering acute pain attacks. Persistent dyspeptic symptoms occur frequently following cholecystectomy. A prolonged history of such symptoms prior to surgery and evidence of significant psychological distress appear to be the best predictors of unsatisfactory outcome.
...
PMID:Symptoms of gallstone disease. 148 6
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy seems to be the most promising new technique for the treatment of symptomatic
gallstone
disease. For different reasons, controlled clinical trials comparing comfort and trauma for the patient of conventional versus laparoscopic cholecystectomy are difficult to perform at our institution. We therefore report on the results of our first 400 laparoscopic cholecystectomies using a strict and detailed protocol on technical performance, safety and benefit for the patient. Data was obtained immediately after the operation and after a short-term follow-up. To analyze the technical performance and the safety of the procedure, we developed a new classification system (I-V) of adverse events, including both the patients' and the surgeons' viewpoints. Our results show that in nearly 80% of the cases an optimal result (no adverse events in any respect) was obtained. For different reasons, the surgical procedure had to be changed during the operation in 20 cases (5%). In 3 cases (0.8%), an injury of the common bile duct occurred; 2 patients died (mortality 0.5%). On the first post-operative day, vomiting occurred in only 8% and
nausea
in 19% of the patients. Pain intensity was always below the level where patients demand analgesic medication and declined near zero the day after the operation. Patients fatigue was measured on a scale from 0-10 and rose from 2.2 preoperatively to 3.3 postoperatively. Only a short hospital stay of 3 days median was required. At short-term follow-up 6 weeks after the operation, pain was only rarely reported, the patients were fit and only 20% avoided some kind of food. We conclude that laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the treatment of choice for this precisely defined patient population with symptomatic
gallstone
disease.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic cholecystectomy: technical performance, safety and patient's benefit. 153 13
Gallstones
are very common, but at least two thirds of detected stones are asymptomatic and a large number undoubtedly go undetected. The presence of symptoms or complications is the indication for surgery. It is important to accurately identify which symptoms are caused by
gallstones
, because removing the gallbladder will relieve only these symptoms. Making this determination is a challenge, however, because the classic picture of biliary colic may be inaccurate and the connection between
gallstone
disease and flatulent dyspepsia is questionable at best. Descriptions of both these conditions are based on anecdotal evidence or reports of uncontrolled surgical series. A review of recent controlled trials suggests that the pain of biliary colic is constant and infrequent, comes in episodes lasting 1 to 5 hours, is located in the epigastrium or right upper quadrant of the abdomen, and characteristically occurs at night. There are few additional symptoms other than
nausea
or vomiting, and colic is not induced by eating fatty meals. Flatulent dyspepsia--a symptom complex of vague pain in the right upper quadrant, fatty-food intolerance, and bloating--is probably not related to the presence of
gallstones
in the majority of patients.
...
PMID:Gallstone symptoms. Myth and reality. 192
We describe a case of massive
gallstones
discharged into the stomach through a cholecystoduodenal fistula and the successful removal of these stones by endoscopic electrohydraulic lithotripsy (EEHL) and endoscopic mechanical lithotripsy (EML) for the prevention of
gallstone
ileus. A 60-yr-old woman was admitted with epigastric pain and
nausea
. Upper gastrointestinal tract examination demonstrated backflow of contrast medium from the duodenal bulb into the gallbladder. Endoscopic examination revealed a large fistula on the anterior wall of the duodenal bulb, and two brown stones (about 3 cm in diameter) were found in the stomach. To prevent
gallstone
ileus, removal of these stones was attempted. They were broken into pieces by EEHL, then crushed into smaller pieces by EML and removed orally. Chemical analysis showed the composition of the
gallstones
to be at least 98% cholesterol. The patient was discharged one month after removal of the
gallstones
and has remained asymptomatic.
...
PMID:Successful removal of massive intragastric gallstones by endoscopic electrohydraulic lithotripsy and mechanical lithotripsy. 202 58
A case of
gallstone
ileus in a patient with carcinoma of the ovary is presented. A 78-year-old female with stage III carcinoma of the ovary underwent optimal debulking surgery followed by six courses of chemotherapy and a microscopically positive second-look laparotomy. She was treated by whole-abdomen pelvic radiation. She then developed progressive
nausea
, vomiting, abdominal distension, and eventually complete small bowel obstruction. The diagnosis of
gallstone
ileus was made preoperatively based on the radiological findings. The pathophysiology of
gallstone
ileus is discussed in the differential diagnosis of patients treated for carcinoma of the ovary.
...
PMID:Gallstone ileus masquerading as recurrent carcinoma of the ovary. 222 79
Gallstones
are usually silent. Less commonly, patients with
cholelithiasis
develop symptoms and/or complications; biliary fistula occurs in 3% to 5% of the cases. When a large stone is passed and occludes the duodenum, gastric outlet obstruction (the Bouveret syndrome) may result. In reported cases, the stones are usually larger than 2.5 cm. The usual presenting symptoms are those of bowel obstruction: abdominal pain,
nausea
, and vomiting. Less commonly, the patients experience melena and, rarely, hematemesis. We describe a patient who had the largest stone reported to cause hematemesis rather than bowel obstruction and to be diagnosed endoscopically. The 5 X 4 X 3 cm stone was extracted surgically. Endoscopic diagnosis and extraction of stones up to 3 cm in size has been reported, avoiding the need for surgery.
...
PMID:The Bouveret syndrome: an unusual cause of hematemesis. 222 12
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>