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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The diagnosis of traumatic injury of the gallbladder may only be discovered at the time of celiotomy. The patient initially may be asymptomatic; later, he may develop
nausea
, vomiting, or paralytic ileus. Hemoconcentration, leukocytosis, and biliurea all have been observed, but are inconstant findings. However, increasing abdominal distention without a change in hematocrit value, jaundice,
dark urine
, or acholic stools accompanied by a rising bilirubin level should aid in diagnosis. Although the treatment of traumatic rupture of the gallbladder may be altered to fit the clinical situation and degree of anatomic disruption, most authors agree that cholecystectomy is the method of choice.
...
PMID:Rupture of the gallbladder after blunt abdominal trauma. 112 32
Over the period of two weeks a 19-year-old man developed gradually increasing painless jaundice with
dark urine
and light-coloured soft stools (6-7 times daily), as well as loss of appetite,
nausea
and nagging itch. Biochemical tests indicated marked cholestasis (alkaline phosphatase 800 U/l, gamma-GT 206 U/l). Abdominal ultrasound examination revealed high-grade stenosis of the distal choledochal duct caused by an enlargement of the head of the pancreas and computed tomography confirmed a tumour in this location. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography demonstrated filiform stenosis of the major pancreatic duct and prepapillary stenosis of the choledochal duct. Several needle biopsies failed to establish a definitive diagnosis. A Whipple operation was performed: the stomach was preserved but about 40% of pancreatic tissue resected. Histologically there was chronic suppurative pancreatitis of the head of the pancreas. The patient was symptom-free 6 months after the operation. The case illustrates that it is not always possible in a painless pancreatic tumour to distinguish between pancreatitis and malignant tumour.
...
PMID:[Chronic purulent, draining, indolent pancreatic head pancreatitis with extrahepatic cholestasis]. 193 34
In a prospective study 21 patients with Crohn's disease not responding to standard treatment (salazosulfapyridine and/or corticosteroids) received metronidazole in a dose of 12 to 20 mg per kg body weight over 6 and 12 months respectively. The objectives were documentation of side effects and pharmacokinetic behaviour of metronidazole in relation to the course of the disease. In 3 months intervals and 3 months after the end of treatment activity indices were determined, the side effects of metronidazole were recorded and the drug plasma concentration was measured. Compliance of drug intake was excellent (94%). Best-Index decreased to a minimum after 6 months, orosomucoid after 3 months. Side effects from metronidazole (black tongue,
dark urine
, paraesthesia, metallic taste, epigastric pain, skin reactions,
nausea
) were reported by over 80% of the patients at any time of the study. Nearly 50% of patients developed paraesthesia, which was still present 3 months after the end of treatment. A mean dose of 15.4 mg per kg corresponded to a mean plasma concentration of 10.9 micrograms/ml of metronidazole. Plasma concentrations were not related to treatment success nor to the incidence of side effects. Treatment of Crohn's disease with metronidazole for longer than 3 months is not recommended both because of lack of additional therapeutic gain and because of the increasing risk of side effects.
...
PMID:[The course of Crohn disease and side effect profile with long-term treatment using metronidazole]. 251 68
A computer system for probabilistic diagnosis of jaundice was tested on a patient sample from a geographical area different from that for which it was first constructed. 144 consecutive patients with jaundice seen in two Stockholm hospitals were interviewed and examined to record a total of 82 indicants from history, demographic details, physical findings and laboratory tests. Data were compared with those of 319 jaundiced patients previously interviewed and examined at different London hospitals. It was found that disease incidences were different in the two patient samples. There were more patients with acute viral hepatitis, chronic active hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis in the London data base whereas the Stockholm data base included significantly more patients with Gilbert's syndrome and alcoholic cirrhosis. Indicant frequencies, standardised for disease incidence, differed with respect to age (Stockholm patients were on average six years older), time from onset of first symptom to hospital admission (Stockholm patients had on average a two-week shorter history of disease) and a number of symptoms such as
nausea
, vomiting, anorexia, weight loss, itching, pale stools and
dark urine
which were more frequent among the London patients. Differences in hospital admission policy was regarded as an important reason for the differences in indicant frequency. The results of probabilistic diagnosis were poor. Only 49% of the cases were correctly classified into twelve diagnostic groups. In particular the computer model was poor at separating different causes of malignant bile duct obstruction and at differentiating between malignant and benign bile duct obstruction. However, all cases of acute viral hepatitis were correctly classified and the computer model was 87% accurate in differentiating between medical and surgical jaundice. Reclassification of the 144 patients on their own data showed the computer system to be well calibrated and 97% of the cases were correctly classified according to this procedure. In conclusion, the computer system could not be directly transferred for use in a Swedish hospital but the results of reclassification were sufficiently encouraging to warrant prospective studies.
...
PMID:Computer aided diagnosis of jaundice. A comparison of two data bases. 330 98
This report describes five cases of hepatocellular injury following halothane anesthesia. Four patients had multiple exposures to the anesthetic. Three of the five died from submassive to massive liver cell necrosis. The two survivors developed jaundice and/or
dark urine
following each exposure to halothane; liver biopsy in one showed centrilobular and linear areas of necrosis. Fever, anorexia,
nausea
, vomiting, abdominal pain and jaundice were present in all cases. In the two survivors the prothrombin time was less than 20 seconds throughout the course of the disease, whereas in the three who died the prothrombin time was more than 20 seconds from the onset. The English literature to the end of 1971 is reviewed. Approximately 600 cases of halothane-related hepatitis have been reported
...
PMID:Halothane hepatitis. 468 24
A case is described wherein a 29 year old woman was admitted to the hospital because of the possibility of a hepatic tumor; symptoms included abdominal pain, diffuse hepatic enlargement and absence of uptake in an area of the right hepatic lobe. After a normal pregnancy and delivery 11 years earlier the patient used oral contraceptives (OCs) composed of norethindrone with mestranol until 8 years before entry; 5 years before admission she resumed use of an OC containing norethindrone and ethinyl estradiol. She smoked 1.5 packages of cigarettes and drank 1 glass of wine daily, and there was no history of
nausea
, vomiting, melena, jaundice,
dark urine
, light stools, hepatitis, or blood transfusions. Benign lesions which are known to be caused by OCs fall into 2 groups: designated focal nodular hyperplasia and liver-cell adenoma. The evidence linking the latter with OCs is more convincing since in case-controlled studies the risk of development of adenomas has been shown to increase with the estrogen strength of the OCs and duration of use; in women who have been taking OCs over 7 years the relative risk is 500 times that for matched control nonusers. The vascular complications of OC therapy include Budd-Chiari syndrome, peliosis hepatis, and periportal sinusoidal dilatation. The patient in this case was diagnosed to have periportal and midzonal hepatic sinusoidal dilatation association with OC medication. She underwent an operation on her liver which proved to be successful combined with cessation of OC use. The mechanism by which OCs cause these lesions is not known. In 5 of 13 cases similar to the one described here clinical and biochemical abnormalities resolved and 1 patient had a follow-up liver biopsy that revealed normal findings 10 months after cessation of OC therapy; there is no evidence to suggest that sinusoidal dilatation is irreversible.
...
PMID:Case records of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Weekly clinicopathological exercises. Case 40-1982. Tender hepatomegaly in a 29-year-old woman. 711 Feb 74
In order to determine the incidence and clinical characteristics of acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) a retrospective study was done in Hospital Arzobispo Loayza of Lima for the period 1983-1994. Of 16 patients with that diagnosis, 14 ones (13 female and one male) entered to the study because of their clinical pictures and a positive Watson Schwartz' test. All were Hispanics from Lima. The average age was 24 yr old. The average for delay of diagnosis was 7 days and for hospitalization was 24 days. There was 1.8 AIP attacks by patient. Only 3 patients (21.4%) had familial history of AIP. The most frequent exacerbating factors were infections (52%), menses (20%) and drugs (16%). The main findings were:abdominal pain (100%), hyporexia (100%),
nausea
and vomit (84%) and
dark urine
(80%); hyporeflexia (52%); tachycardia (100%), fever (44%), arterial hypertension (40%) and abdominal distention (40%); anemia (52%), hyponatremia (48%), elevated ESR (40%) and increased activity of SGOT and SGPT (36%). It was found an annual incidence of 1.05 AIP cases and 1.9 attacks by 1000 discharged patients from the Medicine wards. Besides, we found similar clinical characteristics in our patients as it has been reported in the medical literature.
...
PMID:[Acute intermittent porphyria at the Hospital Arzobispo Loayza of Lima (1983-1994). A report of 14 cases]. 800 24
Obstruction of the common bile duct (CBD) by direct extension of tumor is occasionally found in patients with hepatic neoplasms. Tumor embolus to the CBD is very rare, however, when no primary hepatic tumor is found. The patient described herein was a 74-year-old man who presented with a new onset of jaundice,
nausea
, anorexia, and epigastric pain. There was a history of
dark urine
and clay-colored stools, but no fever. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) showed partial obstruction of the common hepatic duct and dilated intrahepatic bile ducts. A computed tomography (CT) scan of the upper abdomen showed no masses. Results of a mesenteric and selective hepatic arteriogram were normal. On abdominal exploration, no tumor was noted. There were no palpable stones in the gallbladder, but a firm mass was felt in the common hepatic duct. Exploration of the CBD produced light-colored debris organized into a cast of the common hepatic duct. Frozen section analysis was negative for tumor cells, but review of the permanent sections confirmed the presence of hepatocellular carcinoma. When non-calculous material is found to be obstructing the CBD, even in the absence of an obvious primary hepatic tumor, tumor embolus or metastasis from a distant site must be considered and the material sent for pathological evaluation.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma embolus to the common hepatic duct with no detectable primary hepatic tumor. 806 43
Cantharidin, known popularly as Spanish fly, has been used for millennia as a sexual stimulant. The chemical is derived from blister beetles and is notable for its vesicant properties. While most commonly available preparations of Spanish fly contain cantharidin in negligible amounts, if at all, the chemical is available illicitly in concentrations capable of causing severe toxicity. Symptoms of cantharidin poisoning include burning of the mouth, dysphagia,
nausea
, hematemesis, gross hematuria, and dysuria. Mucosal erosion and hemorrhage is seen in the upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Renal dysfunction is common and related to acute tubular necrosis and glomerular destruction. Priapism, seizures, and cardiac abnormalities are less commonly seen. We report four cases of cantharidin poisoning presenting to our emergency department with complaints of dysuria and
dark urine
. Three patients had abdominal pain, one had flank pain, and the one woman had vaginal bleeding. Three had hematuria and two had occult rectal bleeding. Low-grade disseminated intravascular coagulation, not previously associated with cantharidin poisoning, was noted in two patients. Management of cantharidin poisoning is supportive. Given the widespread availability of Spanish fly, its reputation as an aphrodisiac, and the fact that ingestion is frequently unwitting, cantharidin poisoning may be a more common cause of morbidity than is generally recognized. Cantharidin poisoning should be suspected in any patient presenting with unexplained hematuria or with GI hemorrhage associated with diffuse injury of the upper GI tract.
...
PMID:Poisoning from "Spanish fly" (cantharidin). 876 16
The goal of our study was to determine the epidemiological and clinical features of imported malaria seen at our military hospital in Hawaii. We reviewed the records of malaria cases seen from January 1, 1979, to December 31, 1995, and compared our results with published reviews from civilian hospitals in North America. Seventy-nine patients were diagnosed with malaria by blood smears. All acquired malaria abroad, mostly in southeast Asia. Sixty-seven percent of cases were vivax malaria, 22% were falciparum malaria, and 11% were caused by undetermined species. Common symptoms were fever (100%), alternate day fever (41%), rigors (91%), headache (59%),
nausea
(41%), fatigue (39%),
dark urine
(32%), and vomiting (31%). Ninety-one percent had fever during hospitalization, but 39% were afebrile on admission. Splenomegaly was detected in 49% of cases. The white blood cell count was normal in 65%, low in 31%, and elevated in 4% of cases. Other laboratory findings were anemia (58%), thrombocytopenia (74%), and mild hyperbilirubinemia (64%). Military physicians initially considered the diagnosis of malaria in only 54% of patients. The epidemiological features of our patients differ from those described in the civilian hospitals. Most of our patients were nonimmune, U.S.-born, military personnel infected in southeast Asia, whereas patients described in reviews from U.S. civilian hospitals were usually foreign-born civilians who were infected in Africa or India. The clinical features of malaria, and the problems of initial misdiagnosis in our patients, were similar to those reported from civilian hospitals. Military physicians, like their civilian colleagues, need more training and experience in malaria.
...
PMID:A review of 79 patients with malaria seen at a military hospital in Hawaii from 1979 to 1995. 950 98
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