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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Posttraumatic acute cholecystitis is a serious complication which can occur in multitrauma patients. Predisposing factors may include fasting, hypotension, transfusions, sepsis, and narcotics. Common signs and symptoms include right upper-quadrant pain or tenderness, nausea and vomiting, and fever. Symptoms began 26 days and 108 days posttrauma in the two patients studied while they were on the rehabilitation service. The recommended treatment is immediate cholecystectomy. Conservative management results in much higher mortality.
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PMID:Posttraumatic acute cholecystitis on the rehabilitation service. 236 1

Should persons with symptomatic gallstones (i.e., those that have caused biliary pain) be treated immediately? Or may they be managed expectantly until pain recurs or a biliary complication (i.e., acute cholecystitis or pancreatitis) occurs? To assess the mortality risk of different strategies, we performed a quantitative analysis. For the expectant management strategy that requires surgery only if a biliary complication occurs, the cumulative lifetime probability of gallstone disease death in a 30-year-old man is about 2%, and most deaths occur after age 65. In comparison, elective cholecystectomy has only a 0.1% rate of gallstone disease death, but all deaths occur at age 30. The average amount of life expectancy gained by immediate cholecystectomy compared with expectant management is 52 days, which is reduced to 23 days using 5% discounting. This gain could be increased only slightly by a 100% effective and risk-free therapy such as perfected lithotripsy or medical dissolution. Results are similar for women. The results suggest that, for persons with symptomatic gallstones, the life expectancy gain of immediate cholecystectomy is relatively small and that the potential incremental gain of nonsurgical therapy is also small. For patients and physicians who believe that life expectancy is of primary consideration, the decision about therapy may be made primarily on non-mortality considerations. Some patients and physicians may decide that the risk of symptomatic gallstones is low enough that a policy of expectant management may be acceptable.
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PMID:Management of patients with symptomatic gallstones: a quantitative analysis. 240 59

Among a variety of acute abdomens, acute torsion of omentum, first reported by Marchett in 1851, is least suspected under the impression of, most commonly, acute appendicitis and then acute cholecystitis, mesenteric thrombosis, ovarian cyst, perforated peptic ulcer, etc. A 52-years-old woman was admitted on May 2, 1987 with anorexia, nausea and RLQ pain for 2 days. Physical examination revealed tenderness, guarding and rigidity over RLQ. White cell count was 12.100/mm3. A reducible hernia was found in the right inguinal region. The operation through McBurney's incision showed blood-stained fluid. Appendix was slightly congested. A solid, gangrenous mass was palpated at right iliac fossa that disclosed a completely tight torsion of omentum twisting 6 times counterclockwise with distal infarction. Segmental omentectomy, appendectomy and hernioplasty were done. The patient's recovery was uneventful. This case emphasizes the necessity of routine examination of the omentum during the course of abdominal exploration especially when serosanguinous fluid was encountered in the peritoneal cavity.
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PMID:[Acute torsion of greater omentum. Report of a case mimicking acute appendicitis]. 263 74

The sonographic Murphy sign is defined as the presence of maximal tenderness elicited by direct pressure of the transducer over a sonographically localized gallbladder. The reported prevalence of this sign is more than 95% in patients with acute cholecystitis. In this series of 18 patients with pathologically proved gangrenous cholecystitis, the sonographic Murphy sign was positive in only six (33%). Clinical examination showed a positive Murphy sign in eight patients (44%), diffuse abdominal pain in nine patients (50%), and no pain in one patient (6%). Other sonographic findings included pericholecystic fluid (10), thickening of the gallbladder wall (10), and a dilated gallbladder (five). Our experience suggests that the absence of the Murphy sign increases the possibility of gangrenous cholecystitis in patients with abdominal pain and sonographic findings of cholecystitis.
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PMID:The sonographic diagnosis of acute gangrenous cholecystitis: importance of the Murphy sign. 264 62

A 52 year old patient was admitted for retrosternal pain not responding to nitroglycerin. Two years before he had suffered myocardial infarction. He had known cholecystolithiasis. Reinfarction was excluded, but the patient developed right upper quadrant abdominal pain with rebound tenderness, fever and leukocytosis. Abdominal sonography supported the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Acute illness resolved rapidly without complications under treatment with antibiotics. The patient underwent cholecystectomy during the free interval four weeks after discharge from the hospital. Intraoperative diagnosis was empyema of the gallbladder with cholecystolithiasis.
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PMID:[Acute retrosternal pain]. 264 31

Sixty patients were treated in the emergency ward for biliary colic. Cholelithiasis was proven by ultrasonography. Twenty patients (group I) were treated by placebo. Twenty patients (group II) were treated by papaverine, and 20 patients were treated by diclofenac sodium (Voltaren) (group III). Twenty more patients (group IV) with low back pain (LBP) were treated with diclofenac sodium (Voltaren) as a control to assess the analgesic effect of Voltaren. Two interesting observations were made: Voltaren was proven more efficient for pain relief (P less than 0.002), and none of the patients treated with Voltaren were in need of hospitalization and immediate surgery. In comparison, nine patients of the other two groups progressed to acute cholecystitis and needed surgical intervention. The possible anticolic and anti-biliary inflammation properties and the indications for use of Voltaren are discussed.
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PMID:Biliary colic treatment and acute cholecystitis prevention by prostaglandin inhibitor. 210 77

Ultrasound guided percutaneous cholecystostomy was performed in nine episodes of acute cholecystitis in seven patients unsuitable for laparotomy owing to advancedage (mean 79 years) and the presence of other serious disease. No serious complications were observed (the importance of satisfactory local anaesthesia and minimal catheter manipulation is emphasized); and satisfactory pain relief was obtained almost instantaneously. The procedure would seem to be an acceptable alternative to cholecystectomy in cases of severe acute cholecystitis where laparotomy must be avoided.
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PMID:[Acute cholecystitis. Percutaneous cholecystectomy guided by ultrasound as a therapeutic alternative for seriously ill patients]. 267 51

In a series of 120 patients with periarteritis nodosa (PAN), 50 had gastrointestinal manifestations; 34 had transient abdominal pain which regressed spontaneously or in response to corticosteroid therapy and required no further investigation. Thirty one more serious episodes occurred in the remaining 26 patients. Eight of these were in fact the initial signs of PAN and 13 required laparotomy. There were 20 episodes of abdominal pain (peritonitis: 9, pancreatitis: 4, acute cholecystitis: 2, duodenal ulcer: 3, intestinal infarction: 1, unexplained pain without diagnosis at laparotomy: 1) and 11 of gastrointestinal hemorrhage (melaena or hematemesis: 4; hematochezia: 5). Clinical and biological features of patients with and without gastrointestinal manifestation were not significantly different except for cardiac involvement which was significantly more frequent (p less than 0.05) in the second group. Corrected survival rates were significantly lower (p less than 0.05) in patients with gastrointestinal manifestations. These results show that, in patients with PAN, digestive manifestations, particularly perforations, carried a poor prognosis. Nevertheless exploratory laparotomy and surgery unrelated to PAN (eg appendicectomy) were well tolerated.
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PMID:[Digestive manifestations of periarteritis nodosa in a series of 120 cases]. 286 41

In an open, randomized prospective clinical trial the analgesic effect of indomethacin and ketobemidon was compared in 67 patients with acute cholecystitis (28 received 5 mg ketobemidon and 39 received 50 mg indomethacin). Both drugs showed a good and significant pain relief, exhibiting no significant difference in the analgesic effect and no serious adverse reactions. It was concluded that indomethacin administered intravenously is an alternative to ketobemidon intravenously in the treatment of pain resulting from acute cholecystitis and may offer some advantages.
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PMID:[Comparison of indomethacin and ketobemidone as analgesics in acute cholecystitis]. 287 Dec 19

The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of death as the initial manifestation of cholelithiasis. Records of patients who died or underwent cholecystectomy for gallstone-related disease at Duke University Medical Center between 1976 and 1985 were reviewed. Thirty patients died, six of whom (20%) had previous episodes of biliary pain and stone documentation. Twenty-four (80%) were asymptomatic (three with previous incidental diagnosis of cholelithiasis). Reason for admission included acute cholecystitis (nine), pancreatitis (eight), biliary pain (six), cholangitis (four), jaundice (one), and endocarditis (one). Three patients died of gallstone complications without surgical intervention; one patient had renal failure and two had septicemia. Other causes of death were: sepsis (seven patients), cardiac failure (six), pulmonary complications (four), renal failure (three), cerebrovascular accident (three), liver failure (two), pancreatitis (one), and gastrointestinal bleeding (one). During this period, 1731 cholecystectomies were performed without mortality. In this group, the patients were younger (50 +/- 8 years vs. 64 +/- 13 years, p less than 0.001), and had a lower incidence of cirrhosis (p less than 0.001) and diabetes (p less than 0.002). The sex ratio was inverted (p less than 0.001). This study demonstrates that death from gallstones is uncommon (three cases per year), as is death from their initial clinical manifestation (1.2%). The risk of death is two- and ninefold higher in patients with acute cholecystitis or acute pancreatitis. Age, cirrhosis, and diabetes are important determinants of outcome.
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PMID:Deaths from gallstones. Incidence and associated clinical factors. 291 58


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