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Query: UMLS:C0031154 (peritonitis)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

From 1972 to 1989, 20 cases of tuberculous peritonitis were seen in Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital. In 13 patients the diagnosis of tuberculous peritonitis was made only at autopsy, which in 7 patients was made during life. Of all 20 cases the mean age was 78 years, with a range of 63 to 96 years. There were no differences in mean ages between autopsied patients and clinically diagnosed patients. There were 11 male and 9 female patients. In autopsied patients 6 were male and 7 were female. Of the clinically diagnosed patients 5 were male and 2 were female. Seven of 13 patients who were diagnosed at autopsy had liver diseases, for example liver fibrosis, liver cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma or chronic hepatitis. In 4 of 7 patients who were diagnosed during life, ileus was also present and their diagnosis of tuberculous peritonitis was made at operation. Only 6 patients had tuberculin test with intermediate strength PPD. There were no positive reactions. In patients who were diagnosed during life, abdominal swelling, anorexia, abdominal pain and fever, the most common clinical manifestations, were seen in 100%, 75%, 50% and 86%, respectively. In contrast, they were seen in 33%, 57%, 0% and 62%, respectively, in autopsied patients. The volume of ascitic fluid varied from zero to 3000 cc. Total white-cell count in the peripheral blood was within or lower than the normal range in 85% of all 20 cases. The lymphocytes count in the peripheral blood was decreased in 95% of all 20 cases. There were no characteristic features in the serum biochemical analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical and pathological features of tuberculous peritonitis in the elderly]. 207 56

For the period 1980-1988 a total of 5363 patients have been operated at the surgical clinics in the town of Pazardzhik. Early adhesive ileus developed in 13 (0.2 per cent). Intestinal obstruction occurred most frequently after destructive appendicitis (84,6 per cent). In 53.8 per cent of the patients it occurred during the first week after the operation. Conservative treatment was effective in only 2 patients. The other 11 were operated. The case fatality rate was 9.09 per cent. Acute appendicitis usually requires operative treatment both in children and in adults. It keeps on being one of the most important problems of modern surgery, agitating the surgeons all over the world. Appendicitis is called an insidious disease, not only because of the manifold clinical picture, but also because it has a leading position among the causes of the grave surgical complication peritonitis and occupies first place as cause of the severe pathology in the peritoneal cavity--the adhesive disease. Early intestinal obstruction is one of the severe complications following appendicectomy. According to available data in the literature, its incidence is between 0.06 and 0.8 per cent. Most authors consider intestinal obstruction as being early, when developing within three weeks after the operation.
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PMID:[Early adhesive ileus after appendicectomy]. 210 7

Treating ectopic pregnancy with laparoscopy requires special training, but it results in decreased morbidity, discomfort, and pain; reduced recuperative time; and lower cost to the patient and hospital. Many conditions mimic ectopic pregnancy. Therefore, to make the diagnosis, a complete history must be taken, a careful physical examination must be performed, and certain diagnostic tests must be made. Contraindications include bowel obstruction, ileus, abdominal hernia, peritonitis, brisk intraperitoneal bleeding, diaphragmatic hernia, severe cardiac disease, extremes of body weight, previous surgery, or presence of a large abdominal mass.
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PMID:Pelviscopy for ectopic pregnancy: a safer and quicker alternative. 214 37

Since 1984 the peritoneovenous shunt has been installed in 33 patients (10 females - 30.3%; 23 males - 69.7%) of the average age of 54 +/- 8, all in the phase of therapeutically resistant ascites (alcoholic cirrhosis 28 - 84.85%; 4 - 12.12% posthepatitic cirrhosis; and 1 - 3.03% hepatic amyloidosis). The control group consisted of 39 patients (11 females - 28.2% and 28 males - 71.8%) treated in an identical time span with the strict conduction of medicament-diet therapy. The aim of this study was to check the value of this method on our own clinical-patient material, and therefore establish the incidence of complications. By the use of a unique protocol we followed mortality, morbidity, body weight, belly circumference, diuresis, the ultrasonographic finding of the abdominal cavity and the complications which appeared. Out of the group operated on 19 (57%) of the patients died, and so did all the control group patients as well. The average life duration was 275 +/- 810 days in the group operated on, and 44 +/- 29 (p less than 0.005) in the control group. All those alive (14.33-42.42%) lived longer than six months. Six patients lived longer than one year (42.85%), 4 (28.47%) longer than two years, and one (7.14%) longer than three years. There is a statistically significant decrease in body weight, belly circumference, diuresis increase and the consequent ascites withdrawal. DIC occurred in 2 patients, shunt malposition in 2, saccular dilatation in 1, plastic peritonitis in 6, and ileus in 1 patient. Not one of the listed complications resulted by death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Therapy of resistant ascites using the peritoneojugular (Leveen shunt)]. 228 15

Ogilvie's syndrome is defined as a pseudo-obstruction of the colon of unknown cause. A review of recent literature shows a proliferation of reports of such cases associated to multiple conditions. The authors present two cases of perforated peptic ulcers with peritonitis that mimicked Ogilvie's syndrome in the clinical, radiological, and colonoscopic presentations. They propose that pseudo-obstruction cases obviously caused by adynamic ileus be excluded from the Ogilvie's syndrome classification, for a better understanding of its pathogenesis.
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PMID:[Ogilvie syndrome in 2 cases of pseudo-pseudo-obstruction of the colon]. 228 58

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is usually a disease of premature infants, but occasionally it affects the term neonate. A 5-year review of NEC at Children's Hospital and Medical Center identified the unique features of this disease in the term neonate. Eighty-one patients with NEC were treated between January 1984 and May 1989. Ten full-term neonates with gestational age greater than 38 weeks were identified for study. Charts were reviewed for recognized risk factors, clinical course, surgical intervention, and outcome. Ninety percent had a birth weight greater than or equal to 2.7 kg, and all were above 2.1 kg. NEC developed early in this group, with onset of disease in the first 48 hours of life in 50% of the group and within the first 4 days of life in 90%. The recognized risk factors of asphyxia, hypoglycemia, polycythemia, and respiratory distress were absent in 60%. Seven of 10 patients required exploratory laparotomy, whereas 3 of 10 required only medical treatment. Indications for operation were perforation in three patients, peritonitis in three patients, and mass in one patient. All patients requiring operations had severe colonic disease, with perforation of the colon in five of seven and full-thickness necrosis without perforation in two of seven. Two patients required total abdominal colectomy. Only one patient with perforated meconium ileus and associated NEC had small bowel involvement. This patient was the only mortality of the group. Subsequent intestinal continuity was restored in all surviving patients with no late complications. Two patients required resection of additional NEC strictures prior to reanastomosis. Of the three medically treated patients, none required subsequent operation for colonic stricture. Our experience indicates that the presentation, clinical course, and operative findings in full-term neonates with NEC differ from those encountered in the premature infant with NEC.
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PMID:Necrotizing enterocolitis in term neonates. 233 16

From 1980 to 1987, 10,446 patients were operated on. In 152 patients, the necessity of a repeated operative intervention arose. In 106 patients the emergency, in 42--delayed, and in 4--elective relaparotomies were performed. There were the following indications for relaparotomy: diffuse and circumscribed peritonitis (78 patients), ileus (46), eventration (11), hemorrhage (12), others (5). Diagnosis of postoperative complications requiring relaparotomy is difficult. The postoperative lethality was 26%.
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PMID:[Indications for relaparotomy]. 233 75

A study of 406 consecutive children operated upon for appendicitis from July 1982 to July 1987 was compared with a previously published study of 657 children with the same diagnosis operated upon between 1972 and 1982. This was done to determine if the methods of therapy continue to yield low complication rates and zero mortality rates. The routine use of antibiotic coverage for both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria in perforated appendicitis resulted in low complication rates, 3.2 per cent for major and 2.5 per cent for minor complications. Major complications included small intestinal obstruction and intra-abdominal abscess. Minor complications included wound infection and prolonged ileus. These rates are similar to those of the first investigation. The mortality rate continued to be zero. Complete peritoneal lavage was used in patients with generalized peritonitis or extensive localized peritonitis. Operative lysis of adhesions for small intestinal obstruction was required in four of these patients. This did not occur in patients with perforated appendicitis with abscess formation or more localized peritonitis who had no lavage. The technique rather than the disease process may be responsible for the complication.
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PMID:Appendicitis in children. 234 68

Seventy-six patients were treated for postoperative ileus of the small intestine, between 1983 and 1987. Forty-four of them received intraluminal intestinal intubation, with indications being established by stringent criteria. One case of recurrent ileus was recorded eight weeks after removal of the Miller-Abbott tube, but no tube-related lethality was observed. The average age of our patients was as low as 49 years. Post-operative lethality amounted to 21.2 percent (eight in 44). Ileus was not removed until death in three cases. Intraluminal intestinal intubation may be recommended after long-distance lysis of adhesions for postoperative ileus of the small intestine as well as in cases of severe ileus in concomitance with controllable peritonitis.
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PMID:[Experiences with intraluminal small intestinal intubation]. 238 72

For the last 10 years, 97,542 patients were operated on for acute appendicitis, 132 (0.14%) died. Complications of purulent infection (peritonitis, intraabdominal abscesses) and its sequelae (acute commissural ileus, intestinal fistulas) conditioned by late hospitalization were the main cause of lethal outcomes.
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PMID:[Causes of fatal outcome in acute appendicitis]. 239 24


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