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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (
gastric ulcer
)
5,179
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gastric aspirates were obtained from 12 healthy volunteers, 49 patients with duodenal ulcer, 14 with
gastric ulcer
and 35 with gastric carcinoma. The mean total viable bacterial counts in these groups were as follows: volunteers 0, duodenal ulcer 3.8 X 10(1),
gastric ulcer
6.95 X 10(4), carcinoma 1.9 X 10(7) organisms/ml. The incidence of wound
sepsis
in patients without antibiotic cover was; duodenal ulcer 17 per cent,
gastric ulcer
38 per cent, carcinoma 56 per cent. Regardless of the underlying pathology, patients with counts greater than 5 X 10(6) organisms/ml in the gastric aspirate had a 93 per cent incidence of wound
sepsis
, compared with 16 per cent in patients with counts of less than 5 X 10(6) organisms/ml (P less than 0.001). In the group with high counts all except one of the wound infections were caused by organisms present in the stomach at the time of operation. There was a good correlation in the bacteriology of apirates obtained during preoperative endoscopy compared with operative nasogastric samples (n = 31) both for viable counts (r = 0.93) and for the counts of individual organisms. Therefore, preoperative endoscopy can be used to identify patients who are at risk of developing wound
sepsis
after gastric surgery.
...
PMID:Prediction of wound sepsis following gastric operations. 2 66
A four year experience in the management of 585 patients with massive upper gastrointestinal tract bleeding (U. G. I. B.)has been reviewed. The effect of routine fiberoptic gastroscopy, selective angiography, and selective pitressin arterial infusion has been analyzed as it effects the more accurate diagnosis and better non-operative therapy of these dangerously ill patients. Duodenal and
gastric ulcer
, which comprise one-half of such patients, are best treated by early operation. Mallory-Weiss-syndrome is more frequent than previously appreciated. Pitressin infusion is worthy of trial in diffuse gastritis, varicose- and stress ulcer bleeding. Stress bleeding is usually one manifestation of multiple organ failure due to bacterial
sepsis
.
...
PMID:[New methods of managing massive upper gastrointestinal bleedings (author's transl)]. 30 32
The roentgenographic finding hepatic--portal venous gas (HPVG) has been reported extensively in the pediatric and radiology literature. The surgical implications and clinical significance have yet to be fully defined. This study reviews the 60 reported cases in the literature and adds four new cases. HPVG appears as a branching radiolucency extending to within 2 cm of the liver capsule. HPVG is associated with necrotic bowel (72%), ulcerative colitis (8%), intra abdominal abscess (6%), small bowel obstruction (3%), and
gastric ulcer
(3%). Mucosal damage, bowel distention and
sepsis
predispose to HPVG. The current mortality rate of 75% represents an improvement from previous experience. Analysis of survivors indicates that the finding of HPVG requires urgent surgical exploration except when it is observed in patients with stable ulcerative colitis.
...
PMID:Hepatic--portal venous gas in adults: etiology, pathophysiology and clinical significance. 63 84
Forty-nine patients undergoing elective or emergent gastric surgery have been included in this study. Gastric needle aspiration was performed at the time of surgery in each case, followed by qualitative aerobic and anaerobic bacteriologic analysis. In 18 patients undergoing elective operation for chronic nonobstructing duodenal ulcer a gastric microflora was present in only three patients and no postoperative wound infections were observed. In 29 of 31 patients, in the other groups of patients with bleeding or obstructing duodenal ulcer or in those with
gastric ulcer
or malignancy, intragastric micro-organisms were present. Six of the 7 postoperative wound infections which developed in these groups of patients were due to one of the same bacteria isolated at the time of original needle aspiration. It appears that the endogenous intragastric microflora is a significant factor in the development of postoperative wound
sepsis
following gastric resection, in those groups of patients with a compromise of their normal gastric antibacterial inhibitory mechanisms.
...
PMID:Intragastric microbial colonization in common disease states of the stomach and duodenum. 119 Aug 60
Intrapancreatic air has been considered a reliable sign of pancreatic abscess (PA), although it can also be associated with other pancreatic diseases. We report here the clinical outcome of two patients with acute pancreatitis with gas in the retrogastric region suggestive of an abscess. Both patients exhibited a good clinical course with no evidence of
sepsis
. They were treated with analgesics and one of them with antibiotics. Control CT scans showed disappearance of liquid collections and intrapancreatic gas. In one case an endoscopy disclosed a
gastric ulcer
with changes suggesting a pancreatic fistula. This report shows that intrapancreatic air may mimic PA in cases with acute pancreatitis without septic complications.
...
PMID:[Pancreatic gas with no evidence of abscess. Report of 2 cases]. 194 75
We reported five cases of listeriosis (
sepsis
and meningitis) in the elderly in our hospital during the last 4 years, where no cases of listeriosis had been found. These 5 cases had diabetes mellitus, lung cancer, chronic respiratory failure,
gastric ulcer
and aplastic anemia respectively as their underlying diseases. At the onset of listeriosis, 3 cases received corticosteroid and 3 cases received H2-blocker. 2 patients were cured and 3 patients died. Three autopsy cases had meningitis or meningoencephalitis and 2 cases of these autopsy cases had granulomatous changes in these spleens. In serotypes of Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes), 4 cases were 4b and 1 cases was 1b. All 5 strains were resistant to 3rd generation cephems. Wide uses of 3rd generation cephems and H2-blocker may be one of the reasons for the recent increase of listeriosis. Ingestion of contaminated food is the pathogenetic mechanism for initiating L. monocytogenes infections. And following the change of eating habits and the increase of imported foods, food-born listeriosis may increase. We suppose the increase of L. monocytogenes infections and must give attention to L. monocytogenes infections.
...
PMID:[Five cases of listeriosis in the elderly]. 198 Oct 72
We reviewed the charts of all patients admitted with a diagnosis of
gastric ulcer
from January 1970 to December 1980. Multiple risk factors were recorded in patients receiving medical treatment and compared in those patients successfully treated medically versus those requiring operation after a failed course of medical treatment. One hundred patients were treated medically without surgical intervention, and 34 patients underwent operation after medical therapy failed. Significant risk factors in patients requiring operative therapy included smoking (p = 0.03), multiple trauma and
sepsis
(p = 0.02), large ulcers (p = 0.03), and multiple ulcers (p = 0.02). We have identified a set of factors associated with a high risk of failure of medical therapy. Patients with any of these risk factors may be treated most effectively by a limited trial of medical therapy with close follow-up. If their ulcer disease does not respond readily to standard medical therapy, they should be considered for early elective surgery.
...
PMID:Factors predicting failure of medical therapy for gastric ulcers. 258 92
Acute hepatic failure is characterized by a sudden catastrophic compromise of hepatic failure that causes clinical signs such as anorexia, depression, vomiting, diarrhea, icterus, and encephalopathy. Injurious hepatotoxins, drugs, infectious agents, or metabolic disturbances can cause acute hepatic failure; however, in many cases, the inciting cause is not determined. Treatment is aimed at controlling complications such as fluid-electrolyte imbalances, hepatic encephalopathy, hypoglycemia, bleeding diathesis,
gastric ulcer
,
sepsis
, and endotoxemia, in order to provide time for liver regeneration and recovery.
...
PMID:Acute hepatic failure. 387 99
Development of acute mucosal ulceration is a complex series of catabolic interactions. Hospitalized patients with duodenal or
gastric ulcer
, pathologic gastric hypersecretory states (such as Zollinger-Ellison syndrome), gastric outlet obstruction, esophagitis, severe gastritis or duodenitis,
sepsis
, trauma (particularly head injury or burns), and some patients receiving high-dose corticosteroids are at risk of developing acute stress ulcers. Treatment should be initiated as soon as the patient is identified as being at risk, because measures designed to prevent bleeding or perforation are more effective than those designed to stop bleeding once it supervenes and the cascade of multiple organ failure commences. The presence of acid will trigger the onset of this condition; however, ulceration will not occur if the intraluminal pH can be maintained above 5 by periodic antacid treatment or by H2-receptor blockade. The dosing regimen of antacid or of H2-receptor antagonist should not be fixed, but should be sufficient to keep the gastric pH higher than 5. Antagonists administered via a nasogastric tube are the first line of defense, but 30 to 50 percent of the most ill patients will also be treated parenterally with H2-receptor antagonists. Parenteral H2-receptor blockade therapy is indicated in these patients when the risk of acute or continued ulceration of esophageal, gastric, or duodenal mucosa is high and the oral administration of medication is either not possible or the response to such therapy is unreliable. Parenteral H2-receptor antagonists are rarely administered alone.
...
PMID:Indications for the use of parenteral H2-receptor antagonists. 615 Jun 38
In four groups of 25 patients in whom perioperative prophylactic antibiotics were not used, the wound infection rates after partial gastrectomy were 40% in gastric cancer, 44% in chronic
gastric ulcer
, 24% in chronic duodenal ulcer and after trunkal vagotomy and pyloroplasty, the wound infection rate was 12%. In gastric cancer and chronic
gastric ulcer
, most wound infections were caused by enterobacteria, while in chronic duodenal ulcer almost all infections were caused by Staphylococcus aureus. Appropriate short-term perioperative prophylactic antibiotic use is likely to decrease wound
sepsis
rate in patients who have a gastric resection in the presence of gastric cancer or
gastric ulcer
.
...
PMID:Wound infection rates after gastric surgery in a Melbourne hospital. 657 76
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