Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mortality and the causes of death have been studied in a cohort consisting of 1548 male alcoholics in Stockholm. During the period 1969-1981 there were 542 cases of death in this population. The mortality rates were triple those for males in Stockholm generally. Using the official causes of death there was a highly significant excess mortality in the following diagnostic groups: Cancer in the upper digestive region, primary hepatic cancer, cirrhosis in the liver, pancreatitis, pneumonia, alcoholism and alcoholic poisoning, suicides and other causes of violent death as well as ischemic heart disease. The underlying and contributing causes of death on the death certificates were reclassified according to ICD-rules using clinical records and autopsy protocols. It was found that the underlying cause of death was incorrect in 21.8% of the cases. Important information was withheld in further 19.8%. After validation there was no longer any excess mortality in ischemic heart disease. The number of alcohol-related diagnoses, i.e. alcoholic cardiomyopathy, cirrhosis and fatty liver with alcoholism and alcoholic intoxication, was much greater. It is concluded that there is a underreporting of alcohol-related diseases and injuries which has a great influence on the reliability of death statistics.
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PMID:Validation of diagnoses on death certificates for male alcoholics in Stockholm. 358 75

In the annuals of autopsy records in Japan, edited by the Japanese Society of Pathology and covering 20 years, from 1958 to 1977, 377841 autopsy cases are registered with a short summary of the pathology findings. Of these, 434 cases with idiopathic, interstitial, viral, non-specific (NSM) and giant cell (GCM) myocarditis were found. The incidences of NSM and GCM were 0.11 and 0.007%, respectively. The annual incidence of NSM showed periodic fluctuations with in 5-year intervals and increased remarkably after 1974. Incidence of GCM showed a similar fluctuation but with a one to two year delay of peaks. The male to female ratio was 1.2: 1 and the age distribution had two peaked patterns for both sexes, though these peaks were scattered widely from neonate to elderly patients. The regional distribution of NSM showed a concentration in the middle portion of Honshu and its regional annual incidence had propagation waves from the central area to peripheral areas. The same tendency was observed in GCM cases. Hokkaido was characterized by a low incidence of NSM and no GCM. Complications of myocarditis included pancreatitis, pneumonitis, interstitial nephritis, meningoencephalitis, hepatitis, hepatic cirrhosis and a considerable incidence of malignancies. Antibiotics, antineoplastic agents, steroids and irradiation therapy were the main forms of treatment applied before or after the start of myocarditis.
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PMID:Twenty year autopsy statistics of myocarditis incidence in Japan. 382 May 37

From 1980 to 1984 fortyeight children with portal hypertension were treated, 37 out of these had a prehepatic bloc. In 19 children a sclerotherapy was performed. Seven times a bleeding recurrency occurred and an esophageal stenosis was seen in 2 cases. The distal splenorenal shunt (Warren) was performed 16 times. All children survived, one pneumonia and one slight pancreatitis were observed post-operatively. Four times a shunt obstruction was found at follow-up examinations. Bleeding recurrencies did not appear.
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PMID:[Therapy of portal hypertension in childhood]. 387 23

We treated a patient with an unusual case of cystic fibrosis in whom the diagnosis was not made until age 42 years, the predominant clinical manifestation was recurrent pancreatitis, and the chest roentgenogram and results of pulmonary function tests were normal between bouts of pneumonia. As cystic fibrosis may simulate more benign conditions often seen in adults, the diagnosis must be suspected and confirmed for optimal management. Internists must play an increasingly important role in the diagnosis and management of this disease.
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PMID:Cystic fibrosis. An adult perspective. 397 Jun 29

Excluding the most frequent kinds of problems seen with the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAID)--gastritis, peptic ulceration and renal effects--published reports indicate that these drugs may cause a wide variety of rare adverse reactions. The most serious of these are hypersensitivity reactions: blood dyscrasias (aplastic anemia, thrombocytopenia, agranulocytosis, hemolytic anemia), erythema multiforme and hepatitis. Aseptic meningitis and anaphylactoid reactions may strike patients with underlying immunologic abnormalities; urticaria, bronchospasm and proctocolitis may affect aspirin-sensitive patients. Other unusual reactions include several kinds of bullous dermatitis, febrile reactions, pneumonitis, esophageal ulceration, parotitis, pancreatitis and neurological or psychological effects.
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PMID:Rare adverse reactions to nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. 398 96

A case of acute haemorrhagic, ultimately fatal, pancreatitis in a 72-year-old man is presented. No pneumonia was found. High IgM-titres to Legionella micdadei were demonstrated. In addition 11 patients treated for pancreatitis were studied retrospectively. None had elevated titres to L. micdadei or L. pneumophila.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis possibly caused by Legionella micdadei. 402 37

A case of progressive vaccinia complicating chronic lymphocytic leukaemia is reported. At necropsy a vaccinial pneumonia, focal pancreatitis, and evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation were found. Epithelial proliferation was noted in sweat glands, bronchi, and pancreatic ducts associated with lesions in these sites. The significance of these findings is discussed.
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PMID:Necropsy findings in a case of progressive vaccinia. 501 14

An 8-month-old male infant with severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome was admitted to the hospital with pneumonitis and, subsequently, died at 21 months of age. During his lengthy hospitalization, parainfluenza virus type 3 (PIV-3) was isolated from respiratory secretions and unusual sites, such as pericardial fluid, CSF, and WBCs. A postmortem examination showed apparent viral pancreatitis, and PIV-3 was isolated from the lung, brain, and pericardial fluid. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of disseminated parainfluenza infection identified during life. We speculated that a mutant fusion protein may have been elaborated by the virus, allowing dissemination beyond the respiratory tract.
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PMID:Disseminated parainfluenza infection in a child with severe combined immunodeficiency. 631 7

One hundred twenty-seven artificially ventilated patients with acute respiratory insufficiency (ARI) were investigated. In 61 patients positive endexpiratory pressure (PEEP) was used when ventilation with ZEEP proved to be insufficient for one or more of the following reasons: increasing I-aDO2m PaO3 below 60 Torr at FiO2 greater than or equal to 0.5, deterioration of clinical status (group = secondary PEEP). The time elapse between beginning of artificial ventilation and institution of PEEP was 46 +/- 47 h (median 33 h). In 66 patients PEEP was used from the beginning of artificial ventilation (group II = primary PEEP). The distribution of underlying diseases (severe poisoning, pancreatitis, polytrauma or major surgery, pneumonia, cardiovascular failure, sepsis) as well as the frequency of additional vital function failure (circulatory shock, acute renal failure) were comparable in both groups (p greater than 0.05). At the beginning of artificial ventilation both groups were comparable in respect to respiratory insufficiency. PaO2 was 75 +/- 26 Torr in group I and 70 +/- 29 Torr in group II at comparable levels of FiO2 (p greater than 0.05). PaCO2 was 34.7 +/- 8.2 Torr in group I and 37.4 +/- 10.5 Torr in group II. Significantly more patients in group II received corticosteroids (greater than 1 gr/die). Mortality was 48/61 (79%) in group I and 37/66 (56%) in group II (p less than 0.01). End-inspiratory pressure exceeding 35 cm H2O was necessary in 42/61 patients in group I and 28/66 patients in group II (p less than 0.01) and FiO2 greater than 0.5 was necessary to keep PaO2 above 60 Torr in 39/61 patients in group I and 27/66 patients in group II (p less than 0.01). It is concluded that early institution of PEEP improves the course and outcome of patients with ARI.
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PMID:[Early PEEP for improvement of prognosis in patients with acute respiratory insufficiency (author's transl)]. 678

Out of 26 patients with acute pancreatitis, 8 had several signs of bacterial infection such as high nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) reduction of granulocytes, fever, elevated ESR and leukocytosis with granulocytosis. 2 patients had a high NBT-value without all other clinical signs of infection and 6 had such signs without a high NBT-value. --An NBT-value lower than normal was found in 6 patients, 3 of whom also had other signs of infection. The level of serum lipids, determined in only 3 of the 6, demonstrated concomitant hypertriglyceridemia. Hyperlipidemia is known to decrease granulocyte activity and might have prevented a stimulation to increased NBT-reduction otherwise brought about by bacterial infection. Further, 3 of the 6 patients with low NBT-reductions suffered from a very severe type of pancreatitis and two of them developed pneumonia. --Bacterial infection may thus contribute to a severe clinical course of pancreatitis, especially in patients with hypertriglyceridemia in whom the granulocyte function is depressed.
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PMID:Granulocyte-function in pancreatitis. Nitroblue tetrazolium-test related to clinical signs of bacterial infection and to hypertriglyceridemia. 693 88


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