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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (
gastric ulcer
)
5,179
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors studied the data concerning 101 patients who had undergone erroneous laparotomy for suspected acute surgical disease; these accounted for 0.4% of all the patients who were operated on for emergency indications in the same period. Eleven patients died. The operation was undertaken for an erroneous diagnosis of acute appendicitis (32 patients), acute cholecystitis (18), perforating
gastric ulcer
(15), peritonitis of unknown etiology (14), acute intestinal obstruction (5), strangulated hernia (3), destructive pancreatitis (3), tumor of the large intestine complicated by obstruction (3), abdominal abscess (2), thrombosis of the mesenteric vessels (1), ovarian apoplexy (1), closed abdominal trauma with injury to the viscera (4 patients). Diseases simulating the clinical picture of "acute abdomen" but not requiring an emergency operation were as follows: female reproductive (20 patients), pancreatic (11), renal diseases (11), hepatitis, cirrhosis of the liver (10), cardiovascular (9), pulmonary diseases (5), mesoadenitis (5), Crohn's disease (3), chronic colitis (3),
carcinomatosis
of the peritoneum (3), herpes zoster (3), and other diseases and injuries (20 patients). The main causes of the diagnostic and tactical errors were objective difficulties in the differential diagnosis due to similar symptomatology, as well as errors in the examination of the patient and haste in making a decision to make an operation.
...
PMID:[Erroneous laparotomy in emergency surgery]. 177 33
The CT scan of 100 patients with ascites were reviewed to assess the relative distribution of fluid in the greater and lesser peritoneal sacs. Discordant fluid accumulations were found in most cases. Patients with benign, transudative ascites (e.g., peritoneal dialysis, cirrhosis, congestive heart failure) had large greater sac collections with little fluid in the lesser sac. Those patients with diseases of organs bordering the lesser sac (e.g., pancreatitis, posteriorly penetrating
gastric ulcer
) had larger lesser sac fluid collections with little in the greater sac. Cytologically positive
carcinomatosis
of the abdomen was associated with concordant fluid volumes in these two spaces. These findings suggest that fluid within the lesser sac is not a typical manifestation of generalized peritoneal ascites and that its presence should direct a search for pathology in neighboring organs and for peritoneal malignancy.
...
PMID:Lesser sac fluid in predicting the etiology of ascites: CT findings. 697 68
Gastric cancer in the young adult is rare and has been said to be more aggressive than gastric cancers of the older age group. Its unique association with pregnancy is even rarer. However, they have similar complications of haemorrhage, obstruction and perforation. We report a 27 year old lady at 16 weeks gestation who presented with a perforated malignant
gastric ulcer
and
carcinomatosis
peritonei. Reviewing the literature, we realised that such complication of a gastric cancer occurring in a pregnant young adult has not been previously documented.
...
PMID:Perforated malignant gastric ulcer in a pregnant young adult: a case report. 1107 99
Pulmonary Lymphangitic Carcinomatosis (PLC) occurs in about 6-8% of patients with lung metastasis and may rarely develop in the course of gastric cancer representing a complication due to diffuse metastasis in the lymphatics of the lungs. A 29-year-old female, admitted with difficulty in breathing and productive cough for one week, was initially evaluated for respiratory tract infection. During evaluation of associated anaemia an upper gastrointestinal endoscopy showed large ulcerative growth in the lesser curvature of the stomach suggestive of carcinoma. A High Resolution Computed Tomographic (HRCT) scan of the lungs was done for evaluation of the pulmonary opacities on chest x-ray which showed nodular thickening of interlobular septa with peribronchial cuffing and fissural thickening. The biopsy of the
gastric ulcer
was suggestive of poorly differentiated malignancy. With the cumulative results of the investigations a diagnosis of poorly differentiated carcinoma of stomach with pulmonary metastasis as lymphangitic
carcinomatosis
was made. PLC is an extremely rare manifestation of metastatic gastric cancer. Though associated with an extremely poor prognosis, advanced gastric cancer in younger patients presenting with symptoms and signs of respiratory disease should alert the physician of a possible diagnosis of PLC.
...
PMID:A Rare Case of Pulmonary Lymphangitic Carcinomatosis in a Young Adult with Carcinoma Stomach. 2896 84