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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors observed 6 patients, who developed acute cholecystitis at day 2--5 after the operation. In 3 patients, an operation on the abdominal organs was performed, in 3--the urologic intervention. The leading symptoms of postoperative
cholecystitis
are the following: epigastric pain, stable intestinal
paresis
, high body temperature. The authors recommend a wide use of the ultrasound investigation of the abdominal cavity, and in its negative results, or in absence of the apparatus--laparoscopy. All the patients were reoperated. One patient died.
...
PMID:[Acute cholecystitis in the early postoperative period]. 188 Oct 83
A comparative analysis of 112 patients' case histories with calculous
cholecystitis
has revealed that morphological alterations of the gallbladder wall and in the perevesicular area as well as the operative techniques are essential for the wound healing and ultrasound picture in cholecystectomy zone. Ultrasound investigation within postoperative 24 hours enables a significant prognosis of the onset of intestinal
paresis
, its severity and duration. This is important for conducting early prophylactic measures.
...
PMID:[Ultrasound findings in the zone of cholecystectomy and their role in prognosis of paralytic ileus development]. 922 10
We report a 61-year-old Japanese man who died of complications of esophagus cancer surgery. He was well until his 55 years of the age, when he had an onset of speech disturbance and hand writing. He was seen by a neurologist who prescribed Menesit 600 mg/day. His symptoms improved with this medication. In 1993, three years after the onset, he started to show gait disturbance and easy to fall. In 1995, he noted difficulty in eye opening. He visited our clinic on October 26, 1996. On examination, he showed vertical gaze
paresis
, masked face, nuchal rigidity, small step gait, freezing phenomena, and festination. His mental status was normal. He was treated with 800 mg/day of Menesit, 800 mg/day of L-dops, and 10 mg/day of bromocriptine with little improvement in his symptoms. Cranial CT scan revealed some dilatation of the third ventricle. Subsequent clinical course was one of the slow progression of his parkinsonism. In September of 1997, he noted difficulty in swallowing. He was admitted to the gastrointestinal service of our hospital on October 14, 1997. On admission, neurologic status was essentially similar to the previous one, but he showed more advanced state of his parkinsonism. Upper gastrointestinal series revealed a mass lesion of about 11.5 cm in length protruding into the lower esophagus lumen. Subtotal esophagus resection including the mass was performed on December 2, 1997. The stomach was elevated for anastomosis with the upper esophagus. No metastases were found in the mediastinum except for two lymph nodes in the para-esophageal region. The subsequent course was complicated by marked elevation of GOT, GPT, LDH, total bilirubin as well as direct bilirubin, alkaliphosphatase, and amylase starting in the evening of the surgery. On December 7, leukocytosis and pneumonic shadow were seen involving his right lung. On December 10, he developed cardiopulmonary arrest. He was once resuscitated; however, he developed cardiac arrest again seven hours later and pronounced dead. He was discussed in a neurologic CPC. The chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had PSP and the cause of the death was ascribed to circulatory disturbance to the liver. The discussant also thought that the terminal course was complicated by cholangitis or
cholecystitis
, sepsis, and pulmonary embolism. Surgical specimen of the esophagus tumor revealed carcinosarcoma. Postmortem examination revealed yellowish discoloration of the peritoneum and mesenterium, and accumulation of clouded ascites indicating the presence of peritonitis. Inflammatory change extended to the mediastinum. On microscopic examination, various kinds of bacilli and candida spores were seen. The liver was enlarged and a perforation was noted in the gallbladder causing biliary necrosis in the adjacent liver. An extensive infarct was seen in the left lobe of the liver; this was found to be due to obstruction of the hepatic artery at the site of the duodenohepatic mesenterium and obstruction of intrahepatic portal vein secondary to retrograde intrahepatic cholangitis in the left lobe. A piece of surgical threads was seen adjacent to the hepatic artery; foreign body granulomatous reaction was seen surrounding the surgical thread. The rupture of the gallbladder appeared to be due to the obstruction of the left branch of the hepatic artery. Neuropathologic examination revealed extensive degeneration of the pallidum, the substantia nigra, and the subthalamic nucleus and presence of neurofibrillary tangles in the remaining neurons. The neuropathologic findings were consistent with progressive supranuclear palsy, although the pathologic changes in the midbrain tegmentum was only mild gliosis.
...
PMID:[A 61-year-old man with progressive gait disturbance, freezing, and vertical gaze paresis who developed esophagus cancer]. 986 33
We review our two-team operative technique and results of anterior retroperitoneal lumbosacral spine exposure for diskectomy, partial corpectomy, and spinal instrumentation. Seventy-two patients with lumbar spondylosis and associated symptomatic radiculopathy had this exposure between January 1, 2000 and January 1, 2002. A single disc space was isolated in 54 patients. Multilevel exposure was achieved in 18 patients. Main outcome measures included intra- and postoperative complications, blood transfusion requirements, duration of ileus, incidence of erectile/sexual dysfunction, and length of hospital stay. A single small bowel enterotomy and iliac vein laceration, both repaired primarily, were the only intraoperative complications. Perioperative blood transfusions were required in 13 patients (18%). Mean length of postoperative ileus was 3.5 days and average length of hospital stay was 5 days. Postoperative complications occurred in 7 patients (9.7%). These included erectile dysfunction (2), transient unilateral lower extremity
paresis
(1), acute acalculous
cholecystitis
(1), femoral vein thrombosis (1), pneumonia (1), and acute myocardial infarction (1). There were no genitourinary or other major vascular injuries. A two-team approach for lumbosacral spine instrumentation via anterior retroperitoneal exposure capitalizes on unique specialty-specific surgical skills. This paradigm facilitates safe lumbosacral spine surgery and major perioperative complications are rare.
...
PMID:Anterior retroperitoneal lumbosacral spine exposure: operative technique and results. 1261 53
853 Patients with acute calculous
cholecystitis
were operated during 2004 in the Center of surgery of liver, bile ways and pancreas. Preoperative preparation of 62 patients with
cholecystitis
complicated with hepatitis and cholangitis, included intravenous administration of 5 antihomotoxycological medications simultaneously with routine pharmacological drugs. It resulted in lessening a hospital stay treatment by 2.3 days; also by 34.2% postoperative
paresis
of intestinum, by 52.3% duration of postoperative wound healing, by 54.7% such postoperative problems as dyspeptic symptoms, dyscomphort in right hypohondrium, suffering because of fullness and distortion in epigastrium after food intake and others. The time of preoperative preparation in the group of the operated patients was less by 0.91 days and consists 6.8 hours.
...
PMID:[Complex treatment of patients with cholelithiasis complicated with hepatitis, cholangitis]. 1639 93