Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two patients with food starch granulomatous reactions, one a necrotising granulomatous peritonitis after the perforation of a gastric ulcer and the other a non-necrotising granulomatous appendicitis, are described. The possibility of food starch induced inflammation must be considered in the differential diagnosis of granulomatous diseases of the gastrointestinal tract.
...
PMID:Granulomatous peritonitis and appendicitis of food starch origin. 206 Aug 84

During a 15-year period Haemophilus species were isolated from unusual anatomical sites in 80 patients, mostly adults. The origin of specimens was pus and swabs from suppurative lesions, fluids from serosal cavities and gall bladder, gut content, and blood in cases with a supposed tissue focus. In 17 patients Haemophilus species were isolated in pure culture, in 63 patients in conjunction with other bacteria. 17 patients had gynaecological complaints: bartholinitis, salpingitis, and vaginal discharge. 22 patients had gastrointestinal complaints, comprising 17 with appendicitis, peritonitis following perforation of gastric ulcer, gall-duct infections, and an abscess in the stomach wall, and 5 patients with colonization of the gut. 41 patients had soft tissue and bone infections.
...
PMID:Haemophilus isolated from unusual anatomical sites. 221 6

An antibiotic drug of aminoglycoside group, gentamicin (GM) for parenteral use was used to 14 hospitalized patients; 5 with acute or subacute cholecystitis, 6 with acute peritonitis (4 cases were due to acute appendicitis, a case was torsion of right ovarian cyst and a case was cecal CROHN's disease), 1 with fistula ani and abscess, and 2 with localized peritonitis after gastrectomy due to gastric ulcer. GM in a dose of 60 mg were administered by intravenous drip infusion for 1 to 2 hours, twice a day for 4 to 12 days. To the cases of biliary tract infection, GM was treated for preoperative chemotherapy and to the other cases GM was treated for postoperative chemotherapy. Clinical response was excellent in 7 cases, good in 6 cases, fair in 1 case and poor in none. No adverse effect was observed. The organisms were isolated in 7 cases, 7 were Escherichia coli, 2 were Klebsiella pneumoniae and 3 were Bacteroides fragilis. The MICs for GM were 0.78--1.56 micrograms/ml in 10(8) and 10(6) cells/ml, except B. fragilis. Before the operation of above cases, GM in a dose of 60 mg (a case was 40 mg) were administered by intravenous drip infusion for 1 to 2 hours in 7 cases (3 biliary tract infection, 2 acute peritonitis and 2 gastric ulcer) and 7 cases by intramuscularly. The materials of common duct bile, gall bladder bile, gall bladder wall, the appendix and other tissues, ascites and serum samples were taken during the operation. GM concentration was measured by bioassay method with Bacillus subtilis ATCC 6633 as test organism. GM concentrations in bile and gall bladder wall after intravenous drip infusion were higher than those after intramuscular administration. In the appendicitis with localized peritonitis, GM concentration in the appendix wall with catarrhal appendicitis was 0.90 microgram/g after intramuscular administration. In the cases with diffuse peritonitis and catarrhal appendicitis, GM concentrations in appendixes were 1.18 micrograms/g and 1.37 micrograms/g after intravenous drip infusion. Therefore, it was supposed that GM could be used safety and usefully by intravenous drip infusion than that by intramuscular administration.
...
PMID:[Clinical studies on gentamicin for infectious diseases following intravenous drip infusion]. 684 28

Acute cholecystitis is increasingly becoming a disease of the elderly. The condition begins with colic-like pain in the upper abdomen radiating to the right shoulder, and is accompanied by fever, nausea and vomiting. The diagnosis is confirmed by tenderness and palpable resistance in the right upper abdomen. Ultrasound detects the stone in 95% of cases, and confirms the diagnosis. Differential diagnostic considerations include appendicitis, duodenal or gastric ulcer, and myocardial infarction. Early cholecystectomy is associated with a low complication rate which, however, increases, the longer the intervention is delayed. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy has a lower complication rate and a reduced hospital stay; the reported mortality rate is between 0% and 3.5%. Conventional cholecystectomy is recommended when there is concomitant choledocholithiasis and no possibility of carrying out ERCP, and in patients with previous upper abdominal surgery. Conservative treatment is applied when the patient refuses surgery or is at high risk from anaesthesia.
...
PMID:[Acute cholecystitis. Do you send the patient to the operating room or to bed?]. 1133 14