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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A computer analysis of post renal transplantation gastrointestinal problems was performed to identify important associated clinical factors. Thirty-seven per cent of all transplant recipients developed one or more significant problems. Hemorrhage, nondiverticular intestinal perforation, and esophagitis occurred most frequently in hospitalized patients.
Pancreatitis
, diverticulitis, and gastroduodenal perforation occurred characteristically in long-term survivors with well functioning allografts. Eleven of 32 HLA identical recipients treated with maintenance corticosteroids during stable kidney function developed gastrointestinal disease while only one of 13 HLA identical recipients not given maintenance steroids developed a problem, which strongly suggests a causal role for steroids in the development of late complications. The association of preexisting
peptic ulcer
and diverticular disease with hemorrhage and perforation supports previous recommendations that documented
peptic ulcer disease
or diverticulitis should be corrected surgically prior to transplantation.
...
PMID:Alimentary tract complications after renal transplantation. 38 45
Four patients with intraluminal diverticulum of the duodenum are presented and compared with those reported previously. This lesion is a rare congenital disorder that usually becomes symptomatic in adult life. It is located in the second portion of the duodenum within the lumen, extending distally. It has the appearance of a "thumb of a glove" and it is lined by mucosa on both surfaces. It develops betweeen the fourth and eighth week of the embryo's life, but it increases in size during adult life. It usually presents with typical or atypical symptoms of
peptic ulcer disease
, but sometimes manifestations such as gastrointestinal bleeding, duodenal obstructions or
pancreatitis
may predominate and may be severe and life-threatening. The diagnosis is best made with hypotonic duodenography, which demonstrates the lesion as a barium coated pouch within the air filled duodenal lumen. The treatment of choice is duodenotomy and excision of the lesion. Proper identification of the papilla of the ampulla of Vater is important since this structure is often adjacent to the diverticulum. No recurrences have been noted in the three patients operated upon.
...
PMID:Intraluminal duodenal diverticulum in the adult. 40 22
The increasing importance of physiological and functional surgical procedures in the surgical therapy of benign abdominal disease is implied. Positive results were achieved at the 2nd Department of Surgery of the University of Vienna following parietal cell vagotomy in hypersecretory
gastroduodenal ulcer
, latero-lateral pancreatico-jejunostomy according to Puestov-Mercadier in chronic relapsing
pancreatitis
, distal splenorenal shunt according to Warren in portal hypertension and following peritoneo-venous shunt according to Warren in portal hypertension and following peritoneo-venous shunt according to Le Veen in ascites and cirrhosis of the liver.
...
PMID:[Modern functional and physiological techniques in abdominal surgery (author's transl)]. 42 27
The first case of obstructive jaundice secondary to a chronic afferent loop obstruction has been reported. The cause of the obstructed afferent loop was found to be a carcinoma of the gastric pouch occurring 25 years after surgery for
peptic ulcer disease
. The failure to develop any evidence of
pancreatitis
despite marked dilatation of the biliary tree and gall bladder suggests the existence of an independent functioning pancreatic sphincter, perhaps the sphincter of Boyden.
...
PMID:Afferent loop obstruction presenting as obstructive jaundice. 42 93
Compared with the general hospital population of patients with
pancreatitis
, patients with biliary tract or
peptic ulcer disease
have de novo pancreatic abscesses develop more commonly than patients with alcoholic pancreatitis. The apparent greater predisposition of the patient with biliary tract or
peptic ulcer disease
to infection does not seem to be due so much to these patients having potential sources of infection, such as an infected biliary tract or leaking ulcer, as to the fact that many patients with alcoholism and hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
never survive the fluid loss phase of
pancreatitis
long enough to have a secondary infection and abscess. The mortality associated with the development of de novo pancreatic abscesses is higher in patients with biliary disease,
peptic ulcer
or idiopathic
pancreatitis
in comparison with those patients with alcoholic pancreatitis. Some complications of pancreatic abscesses, such as renal failure, may be avoided through appropriate management of fluid losses during the hemorrhagic phase of
pancreatitis
preceding absecess formation. Good medical management and aggressive use of newer diagnostic and therapeutic modalities may reduce the mortality and complications of pancreatic abscess. Prompt drainage of an abscess once identified is essential to survival. Proximal colostomy or ileostomy is indicated in the patient with a colonic fistula. Large particulate chunks of necrotic pancreas are not easily evacuated through Penrose, cigarette or sump drains. Marsupialization of the abscess may be considered in patients with this type of abscess.
...
PMID:Pancreatic abscess. 50 47
The activity of amylase, lipase and trypsin was increased and that of the trypsin inhibitor decreased in the blood serum of young
peptic ulcer
patients as compared with healthy persons. The antiulcerous dietetics normalized significantly the parameters studied. Similar highly pronounced shifts in the activity of the blood pancreatic enzymes were revealed in atrophic gastritis patients. Hyperamilasuria and clinical symptoms of
pancreatitis
were not observed both in the peptic patients, and in the atrophic gastritis patients. The shifts in the blood content of pancreatic enzymes and their dynamics correlated mainly with the intensity and dynamics of the disturbances in the locomotive function of the gastroduodenal system.
...
PMID:[Effect of the alimentary factor on certain indices of the functional state of the pancreas in young peptic ulcer patients and atrophic gastritis patients]. 51 99
We report on eight cases of parathyroid carcinoma seen at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, since 1969. Diagnosis of a parathyroid disorder was made on the basis of elevated serum calcium levels and associated disorders such as renal calculi,
peptic ulcer disease
,
pancreatitis
, and demineralization of bone. Six of the involved glands were on the left side. In seven patients, the disease was localized to the gland or adjacent structures; one patient had cervical lymph node invasion. Except for the last patient, in whom radical neck dissection and wide excision was done, local excision with adequate margins was the only procedure done. The patient with metastases died of his disease four years later. One patient died of myocardial infarction two years later, but had been normocalcemic in the interval between operation and death, and one patient is hypercalcemic and has had two local recurrences within a 3 1/2 year period. The other five patients are alive and well. The routine use of automated serum level determinations of all hospitalized patients has led to early detection of this malignancy, while it is still a stage I lesion in many instances. On the basis of this material, we conclude that radical neck dissection can no longer be advocated as a routine measure in the treatment of parathyroid carcinoma.
...
PMID:Carcinoma of the parathyroid. 62 71
In order to study the disposition which is thought to be latent in chronic pancreatitis, we investigated the sweat chloride concentration of 95 normal subjects, 43 cases of chronic pancreatitis, 12 cases of cholelithiasis, 15 cases of peptic ulcers, 16 cases of hepatic diseases and 23 cases of diabetes mellitus with the sweat test, using the method of pilocarpine iontophoresis. We obtained the following results. (1) In normal subjects, the sweat chloride concentration was inclined to rise gradually with age from childhood to adulthood; the mean value of sweat chloride concentration was 30.0 mEq/liter in adults from 20 years old, and the upper limit was about 60 mEq/liter. (2) The mean value of sweat chloride concentration was 60.0 mEq/liter in chronic calcifying
pancreatitis
; this value was markedly higher than that of control subjects of the same age (p is less than 0.001). (3) The mean value of sweat chloride concentration in cholelithiasis,
peptic ulcer
and hepatic diseases did not differ significantly from control subjects. The mean value of sweat chloride concentration in diabetes mellitus was significantly higher than that of control subjects (p is less than 0.01), but was significantly lower than that in chronic pancreatitis (p is less than 0.01). (4) It was supposed that some cases of chronic pancreatitis have a congenital disposition toward abnormal secretion of sweat glands and epithelium in the pancreatic duct, resembling cystic fibrosis, and this disposition leads easily to pancreatic disorders when the individual is exposed to various external factors.
...
PMID:The significance of the sweat test in chronic pancreatitis. 67 78
To assess the diagnostic accuracy of a computer-aided-diagnosis system when implemented in different parts of the world, an automated system, which had established its reliability in Leeds, England, was transferred to Sherbrooke, Quebec. In this preliminary study two retrospective series, comprising 104 patients with acute abdominal pain and 101 patients with dyspepsia, were drawn from the files of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire in Sherbrooke. The history and physical-examination sheet was analyzed, coded and tested against the Leeds data base on a WANG 2200 computer, and the results were compared with the final Sherbrooke pathologic diagnosis. Overall the computer made a correct diagnosis in 78.8% of cases of acute abdominal pain and 70% of cases of dyspepsia. Computer diagnoses of appendicitis were correct in 97% of cases and the system recognized 91% of the actual appendicitis cases. Similar figures for cholecystitis were 91% and for
peptic ulcer
, 87%. However, the "pick-up" rate by the computer of
pancreatitis
was only 25%. It is concluded that geographical differences in disease presentation will probably not impair the validity of the computer method used in this study. A comparison of various diagnostic methods and levels of competence will await a prospective trial of this method.
...
PMID:Computer-aided diagnosis of gastroenterologic diseases in Sherbrooke: preliminary report. 76 27
Gastrointestinal diseases are notoriously protean in their modes of expression. The patient's description of symptoms is particularly important, but psychologic, physiologic, and social factors can cause data-base unreliability. Many of the patients termed crocks have symptoms referable to the gastrointestinal system, and they are at considerable health risk, since they usually alienate health care personnel. Patients with
pancreatitis
usually have a history of heavy alcohol intake which also needs treatment. Behavioral disturbances are related to toxic psychosis. Pancreatic carcinoma has a higher incidence of associated psychiatric symptoms than other types of cancer. Biologic, psychologic, and environmental factors all interact dynamically to cause
peptic ulcer disease
. There is a high correlation between the severity of inflammatory bowel disease and degree of emotional disturbances.
...
PMID:Psychosomatic aspects of gastrointestinal disease. 110 97
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