Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 45-year-old woman was admitted in July, 1976 with an acute cholecystitis without jaundice. She had suffered from hepatic colic without fever, jaundice, diarrhea or allergic episodes for the past 8 years. The physical examination only revealed an elective pain on the cystic point. Laboratory data were unremarkable, except for a 12 percent eosinophils. The cholecystogram showed a cholelithiasis. The lithiasis was confirmed during the surgical operation and a fasciolasis was diagnosed after one and 10-12 parasites had been found into the cystic and common bile duct, respectively. A cholecistectomy and choledochoduodenostomy were performed. The patient was treated with 60 mg dehydroemetine during 10 days and 500 mg chloroquine during the other next 10 days. Eggs of Fasciola hepatica were found in the stool culture. The follow-up examinations 3 months and a year after surgery were completely normal. The national literature on this topic is reviewed and the clinical manifestations and therapy of this disease are commented on.
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PMID:[Choledochal obstruction due to Fasciola hepatica (author's transl)]. 4 37

Loin pain may be a major presenting symptom in patients with glomerulonephritis. Most of these patients show an underlying focal and segmental proliferative glomeruloneyphritis and there may be associated deposits of IgA and Igg in the mesangium. In this group of patients, vascular lesions are often prominent in the absence of hypertension. Episodes of recurrent macroscopic hematuria also occur, but the pain cannot be attributed to colic due to blood clots in the ureter.
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PMID:Loin pain as a presenting symptom in idiopathic glomerulonephritis. 12 72

Over a period of 18 months the development of hepatitis after intake of oxyphenisatin, a laxative, was established in 14 patients by re-exposure to the drug. The characteristic feature was nonspecific upper abdominal pain up to colic-like pain, lact of appetite, nausea or vomiting, and pruritus. The biochemical changes were those of chronic hepatitis with varying severity of biliary stasis and abnormal immunofluorescence. On re-exposure there was a particularly remarkable rise in GLDH activity. The histological picture showed acute inflammatory changes in the biliary passages on re-exposure, while the liver cells were clearly involved only secondarily. At a latter point the histological picture became non-specific. At laparoscopy there were different stages of minor periportal hepatic fibrosis to marked postnecrotic liver scars with portal hypertension and decompensation. Early diagnosis is difficult but crucial to the patient's fate, because this form of hepatitis regresses completely after oxyphenisatin has been stopped. Laxatives containing this drug should be withdrawn from the market.
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PMID:[Oxyphenisatin-induced liver disease (author's transl)]. 12 99

A 60-year-old patient with occlusion of the inferior and superior mesenteric arteries and the coeliac axis developed a collateral circulation from the iliac arteries through the rectal vessels, the ascending ramus of the inferior mesenteric artery and the medical colic branch of the superior mesenteric artery. These collaterals were able to ensure survival of all three vascular territories. Along the medial wall of the descending colon and the sigmoid a second, less well developed collateral circulation could be demonstrated by iliac arteriography. The branches of the superior mesenteric artery and of the coeliac axis were only partly demonstrated, or failed to fill, during a free aortic injection and a counter current arteriogram. Clinically the occlusion of the unpaired aortic branches manifested itself as periumbilical pain after food. The involvement of the visceral aortic branches to this extent in the presence of generalised vascular disease is related to an attack of dysentry 38 years previously.
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PMID:[Occlusion of the three unpaired aortic branches with the development of an extensive Riolan's anastomosis (author's transl)]. 15 69

Eight cases of hereditary angioedema, all of them with low values of C1-sterase inhibitor are analyzed. In 7 cases the C3 and C4 components of the complement were assessed; the results showed marked descent of C4. The 8 patients came from 4 different families; only 2 of them were males. Six patients presented digestive disorders, reporting colic pain, nausea and vomiting. In 1 of them the abdominal picture was the only evidence of the disease. In 5 patients the angioedema episodes occurred following traumatisms and in 3 because of emotional states. The duration of the attacks varied from several hours to six days. There was a familial history in all cases. Three of the patients had repeated episodes of pharyngolaryngeal angioedema, two of them requiring emergency tracheotomy because of suffocating crisis. Six patients were treated with Epsilon aminocaproic acid (16 to 20 gr daily) or with tranexamic acid (1 to 3 gr. daily). In 4 cases the results were excellent with either of these antifibrinolytic drugs. No side effects were observed in the tranexamic acid therapy whilst they were frequent in the treatment with Epsilon aminocaproic acid.
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PMID:[Hereditary angioedema by defict of C1 esterase. Our experience in 8 cases]. 31 95

Pain relief was evaluated in 81 patients with acute ureteral colic and the confirmed presence of a calculus. A randomized double-blind comparison of intramuscular 2 and 4 mg. butorphanol and 80 mg. meperidine was used. Pain intensity and pain relief were evaluated at half hour and hourly intervals for 4 hours. A 2 mg. dose of butorphanol was found to be analgesically equivalent to 80 mg. meperidine, while a 4 mg. dose of butorphanol was found to be more effective than 80 mg. meperidine and 2 mg. butorphanol. Each patient received up to 2 doses of analgesic medication when necessary. There was no significant difference in the incidence of side effects among treatments. One patient had visual hallucinations after a 2 mg. dose of butorphanol, possibly owing to its antagonistic activity to significant narcotic experience given previously at another hospital. There was no other evidence of toxicity with butorphanol. It was found to be a safe, effective and wall tolerated drug for the treatment of ureteral colic and is recommended in place of narcotics.
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PMID:Butorphanol and meperidine compared in patients with acute ureteral colic. 38 24

Massive kidney infarct, due to total occlusion of the main artery, is not a frequent process in clinical urology. The most frequent causes are endocarditis, arteritis, atheromatosis and traumatisms. The complete blockage of the renal artery means that the tissue irrigated by the same is bloodless and prone to necrosis and it must be taken into account that although the renal parenchyma cannot withstand for more than 1 to 2 hours the lack of a blood supply, the obstructions or ischemias of shorter duration cause tissue disorders of greater or lesser importance, affecting more quickly and more intensely the cells of the tubules, than those of the glomerules and later the connecting tissue. Clinically, kidney infarcts may sometimes go unobserved and on many other occasions their symptoms are by no means typical although the most characteristic feature is a more intense, sharp, acute pain with macroscopic hematuria, proteinuria and cylindruria and, in the radiological exploration, kidney "silence" but with the excretory duct intact shown by means of retrograde uretero-pyelography. The kidney angiography will reveal the existence of the arterial obstruction, with the resulting avascular image. Extrapremature surgical treatment would be ideal in the cases of massive infarct but this would also require an extrapremature diagnosis, which would enable the embolectomy (where necessary to be carried out, thereby saving the kidney. However, under normal working conditions, taking into account the period of time which inevitably elapses between the patient feeling pain in the kidney and his reaching the Emergency Department and the necessary examinations being carried out which enable the correct diagnosis to be made, the number of hours which have passed make attempts at conservative surgery completely useless. The authors present the case of a 37-year old patient who, 15 days after presenting a picture of right kidney colic, went to the Emergency Department in our Centre where the doctor on duty merely performed a symptomatic treatment and the patient was not admitted to our Department until several days later. In the different radiourographic examinations carried out, right kidney mutism was observed, as well as the permeability of the excretory duct. The aortography revealed the total occlusion of the right renal artery. As more than 20 days had elapsed since the patient first presented the colic pain and before we examined him, there was no other therapeutic solution but the performing of a nephrectomy. The examination of the organ removed confirmed the diagnosis but the origin of the arterial obstruction could not be clarified for sure.
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PMID:[Massive kidney infarct by occlusion of the main artery]. 46 66

Early endoscopy was performed in six cases of acute gastric anisakiasis. Immediately after detecting the larva of anisakis, the larval body was extracted together with its surrounding mucosa by a biopsy forceps. With the removal of the larva, severe colic pain subsided rapidly. Two cases in our series were identified as the stage IV larvae of the anisakis, type I. It was presumed that the stage III larva had exuviated in the human stomach. It is emphasized that endoscopic extraction of larva is the most effective procedure in dealing with acute gastric anisakiasis.
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PMID:Endoscopic management of acute gastric anisakiasis. 57 1

After a brief survey of the expected advantages of the early interruption of pregnancy by the Karman method, the author describes his own observations on immediate and early complications in 850 cases. In the course of intervention, 7.45% of the patients reacted with a vegetative manifestation of cervical shock--pallor, nausea, vomiting, colic-like pain in the lower part of the abdomen (mainly in nullipara). The aspirated amount of material did not surpass 50 ml in women with amenorrhea of 40-45 days duration. The mean duration of the aspiration was 1 minute, 57 seconds. There was menstruation-like bleeding from day 3 to days 10-12 in 86.3% of the women with interruption of pregnancy. Its occurrence in 2.49% of the patients was preceded by colic-like pain and shortlived elevation of axillary temperature up to 38oC. Inflammatory complications were registered up to the 2nd month in 2.49% of the 79.3% followed. The aspiration system with the hand vacuum extractor (Malstrom type) was used successfully for creating negative pressure and thus the special syringe (Karman type) was replaced.
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PMID:[Early artificial termination of pregnancy by Karman's method]. 65 60

Intravenous glucagon and diuresis caused by diagnostic doses of sodium diatrizoate were used to treat 5 patients with ureteral colic and urographic findings consistent with partial obstruction by a ureteral calculus. Pain was relieved and the calculus passed within two hours in 4 patients and within eight hours in the fifth. No complications were noted.
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PMID:Glucagon and diuresis in the treatment of ureteral calculi. 72 63


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