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

A 42-year-old man was transferred to the Emergency Department after his friends had found him unresponsive and confused in his room. He had been experiencing upper abdominal complaints for a period of several months. He had taken large amounts of a calcium carbonate/magnesium subcarbonate preparation (Rennie) and had consumed at least 3 litres of dairy products per day. His behaviour was reported as being more and more abnormal during the previous few weeks. On admission he was confused and agitated and had involuntary movements of his limbs. Laboratory investigation indicated a triple acid base disorder, i.e. metabolic alkalosis, respiratory alkalosis and high anion gap metabolic acidosis, with severe dehydration. The metabolic alkalosis was caused by the intake of large amounts of dairy and antacids: milk-alkali syndrome. The metabolic acidosis was the result of hypovolaemia and pre-renal renal failure and the respiratory alkalosis was caused by hyperventilation due to the organic psychosyndrome. The patient was treated with volume expansion by isotonic saline and the administration of potassium and he was sedated with low-dose midazolam, which led to a full respiratory compensation of the metabolic alkalosis. A few days following admission, both the plasma calcium concentration and renal function returned to normal; the acid-base disorder completely normalized and the organic psychosyndrome disappeared. On gastroduodenoscopy a gastric ulcer was found; biopsies revealed a signet ring cell adenocarcinoma of the stomach.
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PMID:[A man with a classic serious milk-alkali syndrome and a carcinoma of the stomach]. 1690 Oct 67

The Bartter syndrome is a rare hereditary salt-wasting tubulopathy, characterized by metabolic alkalosis, hypokalemia, hyperreninemia and hyperaldosteronemia of varying severity. Indomethacin and high doses of oral potassium have been until now the therapeutic strategies used, with high risk of gastrointestinal injury. Since April 2009, aliskiren--renin inhibitor--has been used in individual cases of Bartter syndrome in adults, by ignoring its use in pediatrics. The authors present the case of an eight year old child with Bartter syndrome, treated with oral potassium chloride and oral indomethacin, whom has been diagnosed a giant gastric ulcer. To enable the reduction of the amount of potassium administered, we chose to start the aliskiren.
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PMID:[Bartter syndrome: a new therapeutic approach]. 2285 10