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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 10-month-old boy had episodes of apparent
colic
with bloody diarrhea. On investigation after
prolapse
of a rectal mass, a pedunculated polyp was found and removed by transanal ligation. The abdominal pain had been caused by the polyp intussuscepting the sigmoid colon into the rectum. Although rectal bleeding in children under age 1 is rarely caused by rectal polyps, physicians should consider this diagnosis in children of any age when recurrent
colic
and blood-streaked diarrhea occur.
...
PMID:Juvenile polyp in a 10-month-old infant. 30 25
There is a high incidence of primary colonic intussusceptions in infants and children in Africa. The case histories of 37 patients are reviewed. Of the varieties described, the caecocolic intussusception (16 patients) presents as an intestinal upset, often mild, with symptoms of
colic
and vomiting. In many of these patients there is known to be an intestinal infestation with Ascaris lumbricoides. This often leads to a delay in establishing the correct diagnosis. Colocolic intussusception (13 patients) gives rise to more acute abdominal symptoms. On clinical assessment, signs of intestinal obstruction are found and there is usually an intra-abdominal mass which can be palpated in the left colon. Further confirmatory evidence of intussusception is the finding of occult blood in stools. There is an unusually high incidence of sigmoid intussusceptions in infants (8 patients). The diagnosis of this form of intussusception is often delayed owing to inadequate clinical assessment of prolapsed bowel at the anal orifice. The length of the prolapsed bowel, the curved nature of the
prolapse
and the possible demonstration of a sulcus between the prolapsed bowel and the anal canal wall, aid in diagnosis.
...
PMID:Colonic intussusceptions in children. 36 78
A single injection of reserpine in an adult horse was believed to induce toxicosis for several days. Clinical signs included erratic,
colic
-like behavior followed by depression, bradycardia, miosis,
ptosis
, and paraphimosis. Diarrhea was not observed and may have been due to the effect of xylazine given with the reserpine. The horse was supported with IV fluids and intensive nursing care. Gradual improvement was noted 72 hours after the horse received the drug. Qualitative analysis via high-performance liquid chromatography was positive for reserpine. Methamphetamine is the recommended antidote but was not used in this case.
...
PMID:Reserpine toxicosis in a horse. 399 54
The author presents his experience in 17 colostomized patients, 15 from high anorectal malformation and 2 from Hirschsprung's disease. He mentions the methods followed to prevent incrustations of the skin, stenosis and
prolapse
of the
colic
mouths. the same as the perforation, eventration and evisceration in this type of operations; he stresses the psychological management of the parents and warns pediatricians and pediatric surgeons to keep in mind that the child is a socio-psycho-biological unit. Finally, he reports with this type of management.
...
PMID:[Medical management of colostomies in children]. 626 24
Severe muscle cramping not associated with exercise was observed in 5 horses. Focal muscle groups in various regions underwent intermittent visible contraction. Intermittent
prolapse
of the third eyelid, sweating, pawing, muscle tremors, and muscle fasciculations also were observed. Clinical signs often were misconstrued as signs of
colic
. Percussion of muscle induced contraction of muscle groups. Concentrations of serum electrolytes and the acid-base balance were within reference limits, but activities of creatine kinase and aspartate transaminase were moderately high. Muscle biopsy revealed no abnormalities except for a few necrotic muscle fibers undergoing phagocytosis. Electromyography of 1 horse was suggestive of increased motor unit activity. All horses had Otobius megnini (ear tick) infestations and had recurrence of signs until treatment was initiated for ear ticks.
...
PMID:Muscle spasms associated with ear tick (Otobius megnini) infestations in five horses. 760 99
Dielt's syndrome is generally known as nephritic
colic
due to the dilation of the urinary tract that results from a renal
ptosis
. In spite of renal
ptosis
being a commonly seen occurrence, sometimes it can be the cause of a serious painful clinical manifestation. This paper presents one case successfully treated through laparoscopic nephropexy. It also includes a discussion on the various diagnostic and therapeutical techniques.
...
PMID:[Laparoscopic approach of Dielt's syndrome]. 1058 56
The aims of surgery in rectal prolapse are various: reducing the
prolapse
, preventing relapse, clearing up incontinence and avoiding constipation. Among several technical options available, anterior rectopexy would appear to be the most suitable for achieving these aims. A retrospective clinical study was conducted in 32 patients operated on from January 1996 to June 1999. For patient recruitment, the preoperative examinations were clinical evaluation, barium enema, anorectal manometry, and urodynamic tests. Surgical procedures were Orr-Loygue rectopexy in 29 cases and Ripstein rectopexy in 3 cases. A sigmoidectomy was also performed in 9 cases and a Burch cystopexy in 4 cases. Early results are available for all patients; only 29 have been evaluated after a mean follow-up of 47 months (range: 30-72). Rectal tenesmus, faecal incontinence and urinary incontinence improved in all cases. Constipation cleared up in 9 cases after a complementary sigmoidectomy; in 15 of the remaining 20 patients constipation persisted or developed. Indications for surgery for rectal prolapse must be considered with caution. The good results of anterior rectopexy depend on correct surgical technique and prevention of septic and pelvic complications. Sigmoidectomy does not increase the morbility rate. A planned
colic
resection in patients with delayed transit would prevent postoperative constipation. The good results are stable even over long-term follow-up periods. This procedure is also effective for the treatment of genital prolapses.
...
PMID:[Rectal prolapse. Functional results after the Orr-Loygue's rectopexy technique]. 1287 76
Martin Luther achieved great success in religious reformation, though he was said to have suffered from many kinds of diseases during his lifetime. Unfortunately, however, his medical history has never been reported in Japan. Since the second half of his thirties, he was suffering from severe constipation, causing hemorrhoids and anal
prolapse
. At the beginning of his forties he had vertigo, tinnitis and headaches, which were the signs of chronic purlent otitis media and ended in left otorrhea and pyorrhea of the left mastoiditis. Nearly at the same time, he started to suffer from anginal pain,
colic
and dysuria due to urinary uric acid stones, gout and left leg ulcer, which were all caused by metabolic syndromes. The last 1/3 of his life was affected by the shadow of diseases, and his religious activities were frequently disturbed. He died from myocardial infarction at the age 63, in February 1546.
...
PMID:[Medical history of Martin Luther]. 2258 92
A 3-year-old female alpaca was referred to the hospital because of tenesmus. Clinical examination revealed a habitual vaginal
prolapse
with tenesmus during urination and defecation. On vaginoscopic examination a persistent hymen was detected. Ultrasonography of the caudal abdomen showed an echogenic fluid-filled uterus. A diagnostic laparotomy led to diagnosis of pyometra. Following ovariohysterectomy, the recovery was uneventful. One and a half years later the alpaca was again admitted to the hospital because of
colic
. Based on the findings, a tentative prognosis was provided and the alpaca was euthanized at the request of the owner. At necropsy, a haemorrhagic infarction of a jejunal loop was found due to incarceration in a fibrous adhesion between the vaginal stump and small intestine.
...
PMID:[Pyometra and persistent hymen in an alpaca]. 2376 21
Between January 2005 and August 2011 141 victims of krait bite poisoning were admitted to the general hospital at Mahad. Clinical signs and symptoms preceding the development of neuroparalysis were analyzed. Fifty-six percent of patients were male. A total of 140 victims reported between midnight and 05:00. Patients awoke in the night due to
abdominal colic
(85%) and chest pain (72%). Patients gave a history of vomiting (42%), sweating (17%) and excessive salivation (35%). On arrival at hospital, 78% cases had dysphasia with pooling of saliva, 89% had heaviness in both eyelids and
ptosis
; 12.5% of patients died on the way to hospital while 13.47% died during treatment. In total, 74.46% recovered, and of these 48% needed artificial ventilation. The sudden onset of
abdominal colic
and vomiting in a person sleeping on the floor without a mosquito net led to neuroparalysis due to krait bite poisoning.
...
PMID:Premonitory signs and symptoms of envenoming by common krait (Bungarus caeruleus). 2454 31
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