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Query: UMLS:C0031154 (
peritonitis
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The paper is summing up the experience concerning the application of liquid crystalline thermography in order to diagnose various forms of
acute cholecystitis
complicated by biliary
peritonitis
. The method was used in 56 patients with various forms of
acute cholecystitis
and in 30 healthy middle-aged people. The authors believe the method used to give more exact diagnosis of the spread and phase of the inflammatory process in different forms of
acute cholecystitis
.
...
PMID:[Liquid-crystal thermography in the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis complicated by biliary peritonitis]. 723 13
The only signs of
acute cholecystitis
in the elderly may be vague abdominal signs associated with low-grade fever or leukocytosis. Life-threatening complications such as performation and bile
peritonitis
are more common in the elderly. Emergency surgery may be necessary in the severely compromised patient.
...
PMID:Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of gallbladder disease in the elderly. 735 75
Operations were fulfilled in 420 patients with
acute cholecystitis
, 132 of them having obstructive jaundice. Only two patients were operated urgently due to
peritonitis
. In the other 130 patients forced diuresis and rational antiinflammatory therapy with antibiotics were used resulting in subsiding acute phenomena and liquidation of jaundice. It created the conditions for valuable examination of the patients and for performing operations under favourable conditions with respect to the cold period. The postoperative lethality in the cold period was 3.1%.
...
PMID:[Surgical procedures in acute cholecystitis complicated by obstructive jaundice]. 742 87
Percutaneous cholecystostomy offers a potentially important therapeutic modality for critically ill patients with
acute cholecystitis
who represent a high risk for general anaesthesia. The aim of the study was to assess experience with percutaneous cholecystostomy in resolving the acute episode of cholecystitis without operative intervention. Twenty-two consecutive patients with a clinical diagnosis of
acute cholecystitis
underwent the procedure. All were at high risk for general anaesthesia, and all but one developed cholecystitis while hospitalized for another co-morbid condition; 14 were in an intensive care unit. Twenty-one of the 22 patients proved to have
acute cholecystitis
(11 acalculous, ten cholelithiasis). There were no acute technical complications. Toxaemia resolved in 17 of the 21 patients with
acute cholecystitis
.
Acute cholecystitis
failed to resolve in three patients; all died within 48 h from overwhelming generalized sepsis. One patient required emergency cholecystectomy for bile
peritonitis
when the cholecystostomy catheter became dislodged 24 h after placement. The 60-day mortality rate for the acalculous and calculous patient groups was 55 and 20 per cent, respectively. Only three interval cholecystectomies have been performed at a mean follow-up of 19 months. In conclusion, percutaneous cholecystostomy may be the procedure of choice for the management of
acute cholecystitis
in the very high-risk critically ill patient. If symptoms fail to resolve quickly, ongoing sepsis, cholangitis or gallbladder necrosis should be suspected.
...
PMID:Percutaneous cholecystostomy: a valuable technique in high-risk patients with presumed acute cholecystitis. 866 26
A retrospective series of 30 (2.8%) cases of cholelithiasis out of 1064 abdominal aortic aneurysmectomies is presented. 21 subjects underwent aneurysmectomy and prosthetic grafting combined with cholecystectomy. Complications related to the combined operation, early or late (6 months to 8 years follow-up was available for the whole series), were not recorded in this subgroup. 9 (30%) patients with coincidental gallstones underwent simple aneurysmectomy: 2 (22%) patients complained of symptoms of biliary colic, eight and fifteen weeks after operation respectively, and successfully underwent medical treatment. A third patient (11%), operated on urgently for ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, developed
acute cholecystitis
, gallbladder perforation and biliary
peritonitis
on the 17th day of operation: he died of multiple organs failure on the 8th day of urgent cholecystectomy. Acute alithiasic cholecystitis was recorded only once (0.1%) among the 1034 abdominal aortic aneurysmectomies without gallstones: fatal outcome was ascribed to massive multiple organ cholesterol embolization. If careful asepsis and correct surgical tactics are observed, cholecystectomy can safely be performed in combination with abdominal aortic aneurysmectomy in subjects with a positive history of cholecystitis or in poor general conditions, but it cannot be considered as a prophylactic treatment towards postoperative
acute cholecystitis
in good-risk subjects with a negative history of cholecystitis.
...
PMID:[A rational approach to cholecystectomy in the patient with an abdominal aortic aneurysm]. 774 50
Gallbladder stones remain asymptomatic over a long period. The biliary colic is the typical pain caused by these stones. Dyspeptic symptoms seem to be unrelated to the presence of gallstones.
Acute cholecystitis
, a serious complication of gallstone disease, spans a wide spectrum of clinical findings. The typical signs are right upper abdominal pain and tenderness, fever, leucocytosis and Murphy's sign. 35% of patients experience gallbladder empyema or perforation. Localized gallbladder perforation, characterized by high fever, severe right upper abdominal pain and tenderness and a palpable mass is often difficult to distinguish from
acute cholecystitis
. Free perforation into the abdominal cavity causes diffuse
peritonitis
. Gallbladder perforation into the lumen of an adjacent organ produces fistulas, mostly with minimal symptoms or a pain relief after decompression of the inflamed gallbladder. Air in the bile ducts and on some occasions bile-acid-induced diarrhea may result. Rarely, the perforation of large stones leads to an occlusion of the GI tract and results in a gallstone ileus. Common bile duct stones may be asymptomatic or cause bile duct obstruction with biliary colics and jaundice. Acute bacterial cholangitis characterized by Charcot's triad (pain, jaundice and fever) and the acute biliary pancreatitis with its typical symptoms are the serious complications of common bile duct stones, associated with a high mortality rate. The clinical manifestations of a gallstone disease and its complications reveal important diagnostic features, but the most important diagnostic features, modalities are the imaging procedures. They are decisive for an accurate therapy.
...
PMID:[Clinical manifestations of cholelithiasis and its complications]. 776 32
Acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC) is a life-threatening condition whose incidence is steadily increasing although still lower than the corresponding lithiasic forms: AAC represents around 5-10% of all cases of
acute cholecystitis
. The severity of the disease is due to the rapid evolution towards gallbladder necrosis and biliary
peritonitis
. AAC is more frequently a disease of the critically ill patient arising in postoperative courses or in stressing conditions. Not rarely, however, it may occur with no evident predisposing factors and it seems related, in such cases, to elderly ages and to atheromatous vascular conditions. The authors report two cases of idiopathic AAC in elderly patients: pathogenic and clinical features as well as therapeutic options are analyzed and discussed.
...
PMID:[Primary acute acalculous cholecystitis]. 777 29
In about 95% of patients with
acute cholecystitis
the cystic duct is obstructed by a gall stone. The imprisoned bile salts have a toxic action on the gall bladder wall.
Acute cholecystitis
is liable to be confused with other causes of sudden pain and tenderness in the right hypochondrium. Below the diaphragm, acute retrocecal appendicitis, intestinal obstruction, a perforated peptic ulcer or acute pancreatitis may be confusing factors; however, the gall bladder remains shrunken, fibrotic, full of stones and nonfunctioning. Recurrent
acute cholecystitis
may follow, but there may be surprisingly long clinically silent periods. The treatment of choice is elective cholecystectomy. General measures include bed rest, intravenous fluids, a light diet and relief of pain with pethidine and buscopan. Antibiotics are given to treat septicemia and prevent
peritonitis
and empyema. During the first 24 h., 30% of the gall bladder cultures are positive. This rises to 80% after 72 h. Common infecting organisms are Escherichia coli, Streptococcus faecalis and Klebsiella, often in combination. Anaerobes are present, if sought, and are usually found with aerobes. They include Bacteroides and Clostridia. Antibiotic(s) should have a spectrum to cover the colonic type micro-organisms which are usually found with infection of the biliary tree. The choice depends upon the clinical picture. A broad-spectrum penicillin or a cephalosporin is usually adequate for the stable patient with pain and mild fever. The severely septicemic patient is better treated with a combination of ureidopenicillin (mezlocillin or piperacillin) and metronidazole.
...
PMID:[Acute cholecystitis--conservative therapy]. 809 Oct 58
March 1991 through October 1992, in the Clinica Chirurgica II of the Bologna University, 59 patients were submitted to laparoscopic cholecystectomy; the age range was 25 to 76 years and the mean 50 years. In no patient stones bigger than 35 mm were observed and 31% of the subjects were treated with litholysis before surgery. Fifty-eight patients were affected with single or multiple cholelithiasis, 1 had adenomyomatosis and 4 patients had associated choledocholithiasis treated with preoperative ERCP. Both US and cholangiography were performed to detect absolute contraindications--e.g.,
acute cholecystitis
, cholangitis,
peritonitis
and cirrhosis--or relative contraindications--e.g., choledocholithiasis, > 5 mm stones and short cystic duct. US proved to be more sensitive than cholangiography to assess the number of stones and gallbladder wall thickness and to diagnose
acute cholecystitis
or scleroatrophic gallbladder, but it appeared to be less reliable in case of choledocholithiasis, where cholangiography was the technique of choice, and in possible anatomical variations--e.g., short cystic duct--which must be detected before laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Cholangiography appeared to be rather inadequate to study cholelithiasis when associated with functional gallbladder exclusion (as it happened in 17% of our patients). Intraoperative cholangiography was performed on 2 patients only, because their obesity hindered the preoperative study. In conclusion, the need is stressed of combining US and cholangiography for the accurate preoperative evaluation of gallbladder stones patients.
...
PMID:[Imaging technics in the indications for laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Echotomography and cholangiography compared]. 812 10
While diagnostic laparoscopy is a well established tool, therapeutic laparoscopy for acute abdominal disorders has recently been made possible by video-endoscopic techniques. From July 1989 to April 1992, 243 laparoscopic interventions were carried out in patients with an acute abdomen. After a pilot phase, patients with acute appendicitis were entered into a randomized trial, those with
acute cholecystitis
were operated within the next day list. Among the 243 operations were 202 appendectomies, 12 closures of perforated peptic ulcers, 4 successful interventions for intestinal obstruction, 4 irrigations for intraabdominal abscesses and 35 further operations, some of which had to be finished as laparotomies. Laparoscopic appendectomy was less painful but technically more difficult. In cases which needed bowel resection for ischemic necrosis or diverticular disease, conversion to open surgery had to be performed. Laparoscopic treatment of acute abdominal disorders including
peritonitis
can be effective and beneficial in one out of two patients. Adequate surgical training, expertise and respect to the safety of the patient are mandatory. The application of endoscopic suture devices will further enlarge the spectrum of laparoscopic treatment options for the acute abdomen.
...
PMID:[Value of laparoscopy in diagnosis and therapy of the acute abdomen]. 814 45
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