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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 22-year-old man with an incarcerated left paraduodenal hernia is described. Symptoms included
nausea
, vomiting, cramp-like abdominal pain and obstipation. A clinical diagnosis of mechanical small-
intestinal obstruction
was made on the history, examination, and abdominal radiographic findings. At laparotomy successful manual reduction was achieved, resection was not required and the patient made an uneventful recovery.
...
PMID:Left paraduodenal hernia with acute abdominal symptoms. A case report. 373 64
An elderly patient presenting with acute abdominal pain,
nausea
, and vomiting underwent a hepatobiliary scan. This demonstrated normal filling of the gallbladder but dilatation of the small bowel, which was found to correspond radiographically to partial small
bowel obstruction
.
...
PMID:The cholescintigraphic pattern of small bowel obstruction. 382 53
During a 2 year period nitrous oxide was used as a sole or supplementary analgesic during 173 vascular or interventional procedures including peripheral angiography and endourologic and endobiliary procedures. The decision to administer nitrous oxide to a given patient was a matter of physician preference. Patients with
bowel obstruction
, pneumothorax, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were excluded from this method of analgesia. The nitrous oxide was administered by a radiology nurse under the supervision of an attending radiologist. Nitrous oxide was used without premedication for 39 procedures and with premedication (usually meperidine 1 mg/kg, promethazine 0.3 mg/kg, or atropine 0.01 mg/kg) in 134 procedures. In 74% of nonpremedicated individuals analgesia was adequate with nitrous oxide alone; 26% required supplemental intravenous medication. In 61% of premedicated individuals pain relief was adequate with nitrous oxide; 39% required supplemental intravenous medication. Complications, including
nausea
, vomiting, and agitation, occurred in eight patients, but were minor and easily reversed by decreasing the concentration of nitrous oxide. Nasally administered nitrous oxide is a safe, easily used, and effective analgesic.
...
PMID:Nitrous oxide: effective analgesic for vascular and interventional procedures. 387 37
We have treated 11 patients having a variety of tumor types and three patients having mitomycin-C-associated thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) with extracorporeal plasma perfusion through filters containing immobilized protein A from Staphylococcus aureus. In performing more than 140 procedures we observed only minimal toxicity, of which fever, chills,
nausea
, and vomiting were the most common symptoms, occurring in 25% of the patients. Significant decrease in blood pressure and bronchospasm were rare complications. However, none of these side effects were severe enough to require therapeutic intervention. The antitumor effect of immunoperfusion was modest. In 10 adequately treated patients there was one measurable tumor reduction (40% decrease of original tumor mass). Two patients had correction of total small
bowel obstruction
, with return to normal food intake and restoration of normal bowel habits, lasting for 6 and 3 months; and two of the two adequately treated TTP patients had dramatic hematological improvement after four and five immunoperfusion treatments and are well at present. We found direct correlation between extent of complement activation and clinical toxicity. By temperature manipulation of the perfusion procedure we were able to control the above-mentioned side effects caused by complement activation.
...
PMID:Clinical experiences with extracorporeal immunoperfusion of plasma from cancer patients. 637 16
Case I: A 9-year-old boy, diagnosed as having hemophilia A at 8 months, was admitted complaining of slight headache and
nausea
one day after a minor head trauma. Neurological deficits were absent but CT scan revealed an epidural hematoma in the posterior fossa. Shortly afterwards, he lapsed into coma with apnea and dilated pupils. Following resuscitation, emergency suboccipital craniectomy and total removal of the bilateral supra- and infratentorial extradural hematoma was performed under AHG administration. The patient gradually regained consciousness, but during the subsequent nine weeks he underwent three major operations (laparotomy): the first two for hemostasis of gastrointestinal bleeding, and the last one for strangulated
intestinal obstruction
. Although this patient necessitated 16 weeks of AHG administration, he was discharged without any side effects after 4 months of hospitalization. Case II: A 10-year-old boy, diagnosed earlier as having hemophilia A, experienced a minor head trauma and was admitted because of headaches and
nausea
. CT scan revealed an epidural hematoma in the posterior fossa. Removal of the hematoma was successfully completed under AHG administration. The patient was discharged without any neurological deficits. In the above hemophilic cases, we used a high concentrated AHG and maintained at 70% of the plasma concentration of the VIII factor during the first 14 postoperative days. The high concentrated AHG was safe for long term administration, so one should not hesitate operation even in the case of intracranial hemorrhage of hemophilic patients. CT scan should be recommended to the patient of hemophilia A even in minor head trauma.
...
PMID:[Acute epidural hematoma in the posterior fossa in patients with hemophilia A--report of two surgically treated cases]. 641 74
Intestinal pseudo-obstruction (IP) is an uncommon disorder of gut motility which must be differentiated from mechanical
intestinal obstruction
. We have seen 11 such patients over the last 5 years. Characteristic symptoms, shared by mechanical obstruction, include abdominal distention and pain,
nausea
, and vomiting. Radiologic studies reveal dilated loops of bowel with air fluid levels. In most patients a major differentiating feature from obstruction may be the presence of diarrhea rather than obstipation. Steatorrhea is secondary to an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria in the motionless dilated loops of bowel. IP has been associated with various disorders: in our series two patients had scleroderma, one multiple small bowel diverticula, one systemic amyloidosis, one celiac disease, and one spinal cord injury; in only two patients was the disorder considered "idiopathic." Three patients had previously undergone a jejuno--ileal bypass for morbid obesity. During the acute episode, the patients were treated symptomatically with decompression by nasogastric or rectal tube with fluid and electrolyte replacement. Malabsorption treated with broad spectrum antibiotics reversing the steatorrhea but not episodes of pseudo-obstruction. Magnesium deficiency was present in seven patients and its correction resulted in amelioration of the symptom complex. In two patients episodes of pseudo-obstruction were markedly reduced by metoclopramide which was not effective in two others.
...
PMID:Chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. 679 59
A 67 years old man was admitted on July 1979 for
nausea
, dysphagia and rectal pain. At age 64 he had undergone radiotherapy on the lower lip for an epidermoid carcinoma. He remained then healthy. His medical history was negative with the exception of chronic bronchitis. He had never been exposed to toxic agents or drugs and had never left Europe. A few days after admission he suffered acute
intestinal obstruction
but at laparostomy no etiology was found. At the same time the patient complained of pain in all four limbs and he was found to have diffuse wasting of muscles, areflexia and distal sensory loss. No sign of dysautonomia was present. Physical examination was negative with the exception of a cervical lymphadenopathy. The lymph node biopsy showed an undifferentiated metastatic carcinoma. Negative investigations included: blood cells count; serum ionogram and immunoelectrophoresis; thyroid function tests; serological test for Chagas' disease. The following abnormalities were found: ESR: 55-105; CSF protein: 145 mg/100 ml and 1 cell mm3; whole blood folic acid: 1,7 mg/ml; Hbs antigen was present in blood; EMG showed evidence of denervation but motor conduction velocities were normal. By September the patient's weakness had increased and complete
intestinal obstruction
persisted. At oesophageal, gastric and duodenal fibroscopy no contraction was visible, and biopsies were negative. The patient died of peritonitis on October 5th, 1979. At necropsy peritonitis secondary to multiple perforation of the large bowel was found. No recurrence of the lip carcinoma or metastase or evidence of a primary carcinoma was found. Light microscopy showed no evidence of amyloidosis or scleroderma. Examination of the alimentary tract showed abnormalities restricted to the myenteric plexuses which varied from one level to another. In the small bowel there was hyperplasia of the smooth muscle and the myenteric plexuses were enlarged by marked proliferation of Schwann cells. Severe neuronal loss and nodules of Nageotte were also noted. Schwann cells proliferation was less marked in the stomach and large bowel. Lympho-histiocytic infiltration strictly confined to the region of the myenteric plexuses was present in oesophagus, stomach, large bowel and rectum. Mild chronic inflammatory lesions were also found in anterior and posterior spinal roots and semi-lunar ganglia. The striking feature of this case is the association of an undifferentiated carcinoma and a polyradiculoneuritis with a complete alimentary tract palsy of rapid onset, secondary to lesions restricted to the myenteric plexuses. The low folate level was insufficient to explain the neuropathy. Investigations showed no evidence of the usual causes of intestinal pseudo-obstruction: muscular, dysautonomic, toxic, plexic (idiopathic, familial, inflammatory), Chagas' disease). The clinical course, the pathological pictures of the alimentary tract and spinal roots and the association with a carcinoma suggest that our case may represent a paraneoplastic syndrome...
...
PMID:[Paralysis of digestive tract with lesions of myenteric plexuses. A new paraneoplastic syndrome (author's transl)]. 729 42
A phase I study of a new fluorinated pyrimidine, 1-hexylcarbamoyl-5-fluorouracil (HCFU), was performed by a multi-institutional clinical study group using a total of 111 patients with histologically proven malignancies. The characteristic toxic effects were a transient hot sensation and pollakiuria, which occurred 15-120 minutes after oral administration of the drug, continued for 30 minutes to 4 hours, and subsided spontaneously. Gastrointestinal disturbances such as
nausea
, vomiting, diarrhea, and anorexia, which are common with 5-FU administration, also occurred with HCFU but did so less frequently. The maximum tolerated dose for a single oral administration was estimated to be between 12 and 15 mg/kg and the optimal daily dose for continuous administration was considered to be between 9 and 18 mg/kg, with divided daily administration. Fifty-seven patients received 5-19 mg/kg/day of HCFU for > 4 weeks, including 31 patients with > 60 days' treatment. Cumulative doses were from 9.5 to 166.2 g, with a mean of 26.3 g. Hematopoietic toxicity was slight and hepatic toxicity was questionable. No renal or other cumulative toxicity was observed. In ten of the 57 patients, favorable clinical effects were seen: an active decrease in the size of the solid tumor (three patients), the disappearance of ascites (six), and the improvement of
intestinal obstruction
due to peritoneal carcinomatosis (one).
...
PMID:Phase I study of a new antitumor drug, 1-hexylcarbamoyl-5-fluorouracil (HCFU), administered orally: an HCFU clinical study group report. 744 23
During laparoscopic cholecystectomy, gallbladder perforation with leakage of bile and/or gallstones into the abdominal cavity occurs frequently. When this occurs, our practice has been to lavage the operative field and retrieve as many gallstones as possible. We were concerned, however, that complications secondary to infection or adhesions might develop. To address this issue, our first 250 consecutive patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy were surveyed by postal questionnaire. In the 35-48 months (mean, 41 months) since operation, six patients (2.6%) died of nonbiliary causes. Of the 225 patients (90%) who completed the questionnaire, 73 (33%) suffered intraoperative gallbladder perforation. There were no late wound or intraabdominal infectious complications and no patient has required reoperation for intraabdominal sepsis or
bowel obstruction
. In the entire group, gastrointestinal symptoms were prevalent and included flatulence (40%), loose stools or fecal urgency (35%), belching (23%), and
nausea
(4%). The prevalence of these complaints was similar in patients with and without gallbladder perforation. Intraoperative gallbladder perforation during laparoscopic cholecystectomy, therefore, does not cause adverse long-term complications when accompanied by operative lavage and stone removal.
...
PMID:The influence of intraoperative gallbladder perforation on long-term outcome after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 748 16
A case of an incarcerated Richter's hernia in a 12-mm trocar site is presented. A 72 year old man underwent laparoscopic herniorrhapy because of a recurrent inguinal hernia. On the sixth postoperative day he developed abdominal pain,
nausea
, vomiting and abdominal distension. Plain abdominal X-ray showed
bowel obstruction
. Computed tomography with oral contrast showed herniation of small bowel above the fascia. The patient was immediately reoperated, the intestine was reduced, and the fascial defect at the trocar site closed. Three days later he underwent surgery again due to a small perforation of the small bowel and a persistent fascial defect. The patient had an uneventful postoperative course. Herniation through a trocar site is a rare complication-incarceration extremely rare. We recommend that all fascial defects of 10 mm or more are closed sufficiently.
...
PMID:[Richter hernia in trocar site after laparoscopic herniotomy]. 748 3
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