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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Urinary concretions, particularly in the upper urinary tract, occur in otherwise healthy children in connection with Bacillus Proteus urinary infections. In other European countries, this occurs in 40-70% while, on the other hand, it is particularly rare in Scandinavia. A case of obstructing pelvic concretion in a boy aged three months is presented. This is the youngest case which could be found in the literature. Pyelolithotomy was performed and the child has been free from recurrence for six years. At the commencement of the disease,
pain
due to renal calculi may be misinterpreted as being due to three-months
intestinal colic
. Formation of calculi is presumed to be due the ability of Bacillus Proteus to form urease. The frequency of recurrences is 3-8% and is lowest if the urine can be maintained sterile for the first three months after removal of the stone.
...
PMID:[Renal calculi in an infant]. 195 78
Prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors are used for the treatment of ureteric
colic
. However, there is controversy regarding the mechanism of action of these drugs. In this study, differential prostaglandin synthesis in the human renal pelvis, ureter and bladder was measured using specific radioimmunoassays and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. There was a significant quantitative predominance of the smooth muscle constrictor eicosanoids, PGF2 alpha and TXA2 over the dilatory PGE2 in tissue from all sites--renal pelvis, ureter and bladder. The results indicate that prostaglandins play a direct role in smooth muscle activity of the upper urinary tract and the inhibition of this activity with indomethacin indicates a further mode of its action in
pain
relief in ureteric
colic
.
...
PMID:Eicosanoid synthesis in the isolated human renal pelvis, ureter and bladder. 202 8
During a 10-year period 2610 patients were operated on for biliary lithiasis; in 225 (8.6 per cent) cases the operation concluded with a choledochoduodenostomy. The commonest preoperative diagnosis (62.2 per cent) in these 225 patients was choledocholithiasis; 30 patients had previously had a cholecystectomy. After choledochoduodenostomy, 4.0 per cent of patients had an intra-abdominal complication; six patients developed an intra-abdominal abscess and three developed an external biliary fistula. Four patients (1.8 per cent) died, three from pulmonary complications and one from a biliary fistula. After a mean follow-up period of 4.6 years, 71.5 per cent of patients were asymptomatic. The remainder suffered from dyspepsia (15.1 per cent), colicky
pain
(8.7 per cent) or episodes of cholangitis (4.7 per cent). Endoscopy in the symptomatic patients allowed the following conclusions: (a) no patient with dyspepsia had a problem at the anastomosis; (b) 27 per cent of those with
colic
had anastomotic stenosis or the sump syndrome; and (c) all patients with cholangitis had anastomotic stenosis and residual calculi.
...
PMID:Long-term results of choledochoduodenostomy in the treatment of choledocholithiasis: assessment of 225 cases. 203 8
The records of 22 children (sex rate boy/girl 1.75, mean age 2 7/12 year) treated for intussusception in Randers Central Hospital during the period 1975-1989 were reviewed. In 27% of the cases this diagnosis was made before admission, gastroenteritis being the most frequent differential diagnosis (18%). The mean duration of symptoms before admission was 24 hours. No significant correlation between low age and late diagnosis was found. Symptoms were vomiting (100%),
abdominal colic
(95%), palpable abdominal tumour (73%), diarrhoea with blood and mucus (63%) and low-grade fever (64%). Treatment by barium enema had a low success-rate (29%); the best results were recorded in children with symptoms for less than 24 hours. The mean duration of the hospital stay was 3.5 days in children treated by barium reduction and 8.5 days in children treated surgically. Early diagnosis seems to increase the success-rate of non-operative treatment. Absence of the classical triad of paroxysmal
pain
, abdominal mass and red currant jelly stool (found in 41% of the cases) does not exclude the possibility of intussusception.
...
PMID:[Intussusception in children]. 204 44
Intestinal obstruction is a relatively common clinical problem in patients with advanced cancer, particularly those with colorectal and ovarian tumours. A proportion of patients have a non-malignant cause for their obstruction, but in the remaining patients obstruction will be caused by advanced malignancy itself. In the past, most patients were either managed surgically or by nasogastric intestinal decompression and intravenous hydration. Surgery in patients with advanced cancer is associated with high mortality and morbidity. Effective surgical decompression is difficult. We have managed 24 patients with advanced abdominal malignancy and previous operative or radiological evidence of intestinal obstruction without operation. The technique is only appropriate for patients in whom a solitary or correctable obstructing lesion can be excluded. The patient is encouraged to take free fluid and a diet low in fibre.
Intestinal colic
is managed with morphine, the dose required being titrated for each individual patient against background
pain
and
colic
. Vomiting is controlled by the parenteral administration of antiemetic drugs. To simplify drug administration, morphine and metoclopramide are mixed in the same syringe and infused subcutaneously simultaneously. In our 24 patients the mean survival rate after the onset of complete obstruction was 29.2 days. The mean dose of morphine infused was 9.2 mg/h, and the mean dose of metoclopramide was 6.9 mg/h. The case of an 82-year-old male patient is presented. We commend the technique to surgeons contemplating surgery in these very difficult patients. It is simple, relatively non-invasive and saves the patients the
pain
, discomfort and complications of unproductive surgery.
...
PMID:Non-operative management of malignant intestinal obstruction. 208 97
We treated 38 consecutive outpatients with ureter
colic
with a new anticholinergic spasmolytic agent, cimetropium bromide, in order to evaluate its efficacy in this condition. After assessing
pain
intensity by means of a visual analogic scale, we administered 5 mg i.v. Already after 30 minutes, 4 patients (11%) reported complete subsidence of
pain
. In 21 patients (55%)
pain
subsided almost completely within one hour. Eighteen patients required a second 5 mg i.v. injection after one hour; of these, 13 (72%) had complete regression or marked reduction of
pain
. Apart from dryness of the mouth which appeared in two cases after the second injection and was of moderate intensity, no side effects were observed.
...
PMID:[Clinical experience with an anticholinergic spasmolytic cimetropium bromide in the treatment of patients with renal colic]. 215 32
Truncal subdiaphragmatic vagotomy with pyloroplasty was used in 28 patients with chronic relapsing pancreatitis, 19 of them were inclined to alcohol abuse. In 27 patients followed-up during 3 years, 18 were delivered from
pain
attacks resulting from chronic pancreatitis, the attacks became rarer and less intense in 4 patients, 3 patients had single attacks of pancreatic
colic
. In 2 patients the results of treatment were assessed as unsatisfactory due to often admission to the hospital for
pain
attacks. They were not found to have increased excretory and endocrine insufficiency of the pancreas in this period, but had mental disorders.
...
PMID:[Effect of truncal subdiaphragmatic vagotomy on the pain syndrome in patients with chronic recurrent pancreatitis]. 217 81
A randomised multicentre clinical trial was undertaken to compare the effect on
pain
of indomethacin administered either intravenously or rectally to 116 patients with ureteric
colic
. Adverse reactions were also assessed. Of the patients receiving the intravenous injection, 48/53 (91%) achieved good
pain
relief (i.e. no supplementary analgesia was required) 30 min after administration, compared with 46/63 (73%) receiving the enema. Significantly more side effects occurred in the group treated intravenously. It was concluded that indomethacin administered as an enema was less effective than the intravenous form, but it should be regarded as a good alternative in the treatment of ureteric
colic
.
...
PMID:Treatment of ureteric colic. Intravenous versus rectal administration of indomethacin. 219 71
The use of metamizole is controversial, as reflected in the very different national regulations affecting it. The striking disparities between policies for metamizole made us try to determine if there were reasons to ban, limit or liberalize its utilization. After reviewing the literature, it was concluded that metamizole should not be withdrawn from the countries where its use is still relatively free. However, metamizole causes life-threatening adverse events that are usually unpredictable and can only be prevented by better prescribing habits, so it is suggested that its use as a first-line agent should be restricted to the treatment of the
pain
of acute
colic
and circumstances in which parenteral administration of a non-narcotic agent is mandatory. Studies are needed to determine the role of second-line oral analgesics in terms of their overall toxicity and efficacy. In the meantime it is proposed that oral metamizole should be used only when other analgesics (e.g. paracetamol) have failed.
...
PMID:Metamizole: reassessment of its therapeutic role. 219 99
Endogenous opioid peptides have been implicated in the regulation of
pain
perception, behaviour, gastrointestinal activity and other physiological responses. However, the functional role of these peptides in the horse has yet to be elucidated. The opioid antagonist, naloxone, is often administered to infer endogenous opioid effects. In the present study, naloxone (0.75 mg/kg bodyweight) was administered to eight Thoroughbred racehorses and a number of behavioural and autonomic responses were measured. Naloxone produced rapid onset diarrhoea, restlessness, abdominal checking, tachycardia, tachypnoea, paradoxical yawning and diaphoresis. These responses described an acute abdominal distress syndrome similar to spasmodic
colic
. Results from this study suggest that, in the horse, endogenous opioids: 1) influence behaviour, 2) modify intestinal activity and sensation, and 3) if perturbed, may be involved in pathophysiology of
colic
.
...
PMID:Naloxone-induced abdominal distress in the horse. 220 19
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