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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors studied the data concerning 101 patients who had undergone erroneous laparotomy for suspected acute surgical disease; these accounted for 0.4% of all the patients who were operated on for emergency indications in the same period. Eleven patients died. The operation was undertaken for an erroneous diagnosis of acute appendicitis (32 patients), acute cholecystitis (18), perforating gastric ulcer (15), peritonitis of unknown etiology (14), acute intestinal obstruction (5), strangulated hernia (3), destructive
pancreatitis
(3), tumor of the large intestine complicated by obstruction (3), abdominal abscess (2), thrombosis of the mesenteric vessels (1), ovarian apoplexy (1), closed abdominal trauma with injury to the viscera (4 patients). Diseases simulating the clinical picture of "acute abdomen" but not requiring an emergency operation were as follows: female reproductive (20 patients), pancreatic (11), renal diseases (11), hepatitis, cirrhosis of the liver (10), cardiovascular (9), pulmonary diseases (5), mesoadenitis (5), Crohn's disease (3), chronic colitis (3),
carcinomatosis
of the peritoneum (3), herpes zoster (3), and other diseases and injuries (20 patients). The main causes of the diagnostic and tactical errors were objective difficulties in the differential diagnosis due to similar symptomatology, as well as errors in the examination of the patient and haste in making a decision to make an operation.
...
PMID:[Erroneous laparotomy in emergency surgery]. 177 33
We report a case of splenic pseudoaneurysm rupture into the colon in chronic pancreatitis. At the time of bleeding,
pancreatitis
was undiagnosed and the colonic lesion was misinterpreted at colonoscopy. The lesion was also misinterpreted at laparotomy, because it simulated intra-abdominal
carcinomatosis
. The diagnosis was made by CT examination which showed an eccentric enhancing region within a hypodense mass in the region of the splenic hilum. Definitive control of bleeding was achieved by splenic arterial embolization. Splenic infarction and an intrasplenic abscess complicated the embolization, but they did not require surgical intervention. Healing of the colonic wall and of the colonic mucosa was observed at colonoscopy 3 weeks after the embolization.
...
PMID:Splenic pseudoaneurysm rupture into the colon: colonoscopy before and after successful arterial embolization. 345 39
The CT scan of 100 patients with ascites were reviewed to assess the relative distribution of fluid in the greater and lesser peritoneal sacs. Discordant fluid accumulations were found in most cases. Patients with benign, transudative ascites (e.g., peritoneal dialysis, cirrhosis, congestive heart failure) had large greater sac collections with little fluid in the lesser sac. Those patients with diseases of organs bordering the lesser sac (e.g.,
pancreatitis
, posteriorly penetrating gastric ulcer) had larger lesser sac fluid collections with little in the greater sac. Cytologically positive
carcinomatosis
of the abdomen was associated with concordant fluid volumes in these two spaces. These findings suggest that fluid within the lesser sac is not a typical manifestation of generalized peritoneal ascites and that its presence should direct a search for pathology in neighboring organs and for peritoneal malignancy.
...
PMID:Lesser sac fluid in predicting the etiology of ascites: CT findings. 697 68
A large number of ascitic fluid tests, e.g., fibronectin and cholesterol, have been proposed as helpful in detecting malignancy as the cause of ascites. Unfortunately, these "humoral tests of malignancy" are nonspecific. Although the ascitic fluid concentrations of these proteins or protein-bound substances tend to be quite high in patients with peritoneal
carcinomatosis
and low in the setting of cirrhotic ascites, the problem is that patients with tuberculous peritonitis, cardiac ascites,
pancreatitis
ascites, etc. usually have values in the malignancy range, i.e., false-positive results. This can lead to an extensive search for a nonexistent tumor, with confusion and anxiety for patient and physician. The cytology is the single best test to order when peritoneal
carcinomatosis
is suspected; its sensitivity approaches 100%. However, peritoneal
carcinomatosis
is only one of several mechanisms by which tumors can cause ascites. No one test can be expected to detect tumors as the cause of these diverse mechanisms of ascites formation. The serum-ascites albumin gradient is a helpful test in classifying ascitic fluid specimens into portal-hypertension-related and non-portal-hypertension-related categories. An elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein test can be useful in raising suspicion of hepatocellular carcinoma. Careful analysis of ascitic fluid, without measurement of "humoral tests of malignancy," combined with information obtained from the history and physical examination, usually lead to an accurate diagnosis of the cause of ascites.
...
PMID:Malignancy-related ascites and ascitic fluid "humoral tests of malignancy". 818 30
The literature considers hyperthermic intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy a safe and effective procedure for peritoneal
carcinomatosis
, but a technical improvement is necessary. Regional chemotherapy anticipates the "downfall" of tumoral cells in the peritoneum. The Authors considered 5 patients--female, age 27-45 years, ASA 2--operated of peritonectomy in ovaric neoplasia with peritoneal metastasis. The hyperthermic intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy has been made at the end of the surgery with a hot solution (43 degrees C): 3000 ml of dextrose 1.5% with mytomicina C 25 mg e cysplatino 75 mg/m2. We considered variation of emodinamic parametres (blood pressure, central venous pressure, stroke volume, etc.) and biochemical parametres (Na, K, CI-, CO2, etc.). These parametres have been correlated with some complications: fistula, anastomotic leakage,
pancreatitis
and postoperative bleeding.
...
PMID:[Anaesthesiologic problems about hyperthermic intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy]. 1575 60
Technical advances of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including ultrahigh-field magnetic resonance at 3.0 T, parallel imaging techniques, and multichannel receive coils of the abdomen, have promoted MRI of the pancreas. For adenocarcinoma, which is the most common malignant pancreatic tumor, helical CT has been most often used for detection and staging, but it has limitations in the detection of small cancers 2 cm in diameter or less (sensitivity, 63%). Moreover, it is not very accurate in determining nonresectability, because small liver metastases, peritoneal
carcinomatosis
, and subtle signs of vascular infiltration may be missed. At ultrahigh field at 3.0 T, gadolinium-enhanced MRI using volume-interpolated 3-dimensional gradient-recalled echo pulse sequences with near-isotropic voxels are very useful for detection of subtle abnormalities. Mangafodipir-enhanced MRI reveals a very high tumor-pancreas contrast, which helps to diagnose small cancers. Contrast-enhanced MRI is a problem-solving tool in case of equivocal CT: it helps to differentiate between cancer and focal
pancreatitis
. Neuroendocrine carcinoma may present with a spectrum of appearances at MRI, but the primary tumor and liver metastases are hypervascular in approximately 70%. In this article, pancreas imaging protocols for 1.5 and 3.0 T are explained. We present the imaging features of pancreatic cancer and the important questions in staging, which should be addressed by the radiologist.
...
PMID:State-of-the-art magnetic resonance imaging of pancreatic cancer. 1830
Intraabdominal fat is a metabolically active tissue that may undergo necrosis through a number of mechanisms. Fat necrosis is a common finding at abdominal cross-sectional imaging, and it may cause abdominal pain, mimic findings of acute abdomen, or be asymptomatic and accompany other pathophysiologic processes. Common processes that are present in fat necrosis include torsion of an epiploic appendage, infarction of the greater omentum, and fat necrosis related to trauma or
pancreatitis
. In addition, other pathologic processes that involve fat may be visualized at computed tomography, including focal lipohypertrophy, pathologic fat paucity (lipodystrophies), and malignancies such as liposarcoma, which may mimic benign causes of fat stranding. Because fat necrosis and malignant processes such as liposarcoma and peritoneal
carcinomatosis
may mimic one another, knowledge of a patient's clinical history and prior imaging studies is essential for accurate diagnosis.
...
PMID:Imaging manifestations of abdominal fat necrosis and its mimics. 2208 85
This report aims to highlight the importance of malignancy exclusion in the absence of common aetiology in acute pancreatitis. An 83-year-old woman presented acutely with
pancreatitis
. There had been no history suggestive of gallstones disease and she rarely consumed alcohol. Subsequent ultrasound scan revealed no gallstones but multiple liver metastatic lesions. Further
carcinomatosis
involving the pancreas, right ovary, pelvic lymphatics and nodular disease of the lungs was demonstrated on computed tomography. Immuno-histochemistry of liver biopsy showed positivity for markers suggestive of metastasis arising from lung small cell carcinoma. The case was discussed at the lung multidisciplinary meeting and the patient was referred for community palliative care. Early diagnosis of metastasis induced
pancreatitis
allows immediate institution of palliative care, if not suitable for aggressive pharmaco-surgical intervention.
...
PMID:Metastasis-induced pancreatitis: case report. 2354 25
We hereby report a case of diffuse pelvic peritoneal involvement by immunoglobulin G4-related disease (IgG4-RD). Numerous pelvic masses and nodules showing delayed enhancement on enhanced abdominal CT were found to congregate in the pelvic organs of a 57-year-old female presenting with intestinal subocclusion. The differentiation between peritoneal IgG4-RD and pelvic peritoneal
carcinomatosis
was only made by histopathology and immunohistochemistry performed after surgical resection. Autoimmune
pancreatitis
represents the historical prototype of IgG4-RD, but the spectrum of manifestations involving various organs has expanded during the last decade. In this report, we shortly review this clinical entity.
...
PMID:Small bowel obstruction caused by peritoneal immunoglobulin g4-related disease mimicking carcinomatosis: case report. 2449 94
We describe the case of a man who presented with back pain and acute kidney injury and was found to have bilateral ureteral obstruction, which initially corrected with ureteral stents. Imaging studies showed thickening of the bladder. Shortly thereafter, he developed obstructive jaundice,
pancreatitis
, recurrence of renal failure, and was diagnosed with advanced gastric cancer after a laparotomy revealed peritoneal
carcinomatosis
. The patient deteriorated rapidly after diagnosis. While peritoneal
carcinomatosis
, ureteral metastases, and extrinsic ureteral compression have been recognized in gastric cancer, obstructive renal failure due to tumor infiltration of the bladder wall is seldom described. We present this case as an unusual cause of acute renal failure and presentation of gastric cancer.
...
PMID:A Rare Presentation of AKI: Gastric Infiltration of the Bladder Wall. 2453 90
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