Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (volvulus)
4,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The results of the radiological examination of 330 children following oral administration of barium are reported. It is pointed out that if one just takes into account the undoubted organic diseases, only a few children would benefit from the examination; in our case only 9 of them (a gastric and a duodenal ulcer, a pancreas pseudocyst, 5 hiatal hernias, and a celiac disease), i.e. 3%. This is not very satisfactory from a practical point of view. This situation improves radically when one looks for diseases usually rated as questionable: small hiatal hernia (cardiotuberositary malposition), functional disturbances of the small intestine, reactive hyperplasia of the lymphoid tissue, and chronic appendicitis. Thus we were able to offer 177 children, i.e. 53% of them, an efficacious therapy. The importance of chronic appendicitis and of functional disturbances of the small intestine as a cause of abdominal pain in children is pointed out, and their radiological symptoms are discussed. Finally the not uncommon, but not very well known disease of incomplete sigmoid volvulus is described.
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PMID:[Radiologic findings in abdominal pain in children (author's transl)]. 42 1

In a patient who had celic sprue intractable to a gluten-free diet, volvulus and jejunal and colonic ulcers developed. Following segmental colonic resection, these ulcers recurred at the site of the previous anastomosis, and proved a fatal complication because of colonic perforation. Since no obvious etiology of colonic ulcers could be identified in this case, it is possible that they may represent an unrecognized intestinal complication of celiac sprue similar to jejunoileal ulcers.
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PMID:Recurrent colonic ulcers in celiac sprue, an unrecognized fatal complication: report of a case. 91 18

Colonic volvulus has been a rarely reported complication of celiac sprue. We describe two patients with long-standing celiac sprue, one in whom a recurrent sigmoid volvulus developed, and in the other, a cecal volvulus. Following surgery, both are now asymptomatic on a gluten-free diet. The association between celiac sprue and colonic volvulus was first reported in 1953. There have been only a few isolated cases documented, surprisingly so because the two major predisposing conditions for colonic volvulus are often seen in patients with celiac sprue. Colonic bacterial fermentation of malabsorbed carbohydrate (in celiac sprue) leads to excess gas production. Flaccid bowel loops with sigmoid redundancy, a long mesentery, or cecal hypermobility are not uncommon. A motility disorder in celiac sprue has also been proposed. Thus these factors together would suggest that the likelihood of development of colonic volvulus in celiac sprue would be relatively great. The possibility of underlying celiac sprue should be considered in patients with colonic volvulus who have a background history of recurrent abdominal distention or malabsorptive symptoms.
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PMID:Colonic volvulus as a complication of celiac sprue. 226 38

Gas in the portal venous system was detected on plain roentgenograms of the abdomen in two women aged 61 and 72 years, respectively. Both patients had intestinal necrosis, due in one instance to a small bowel volvulus around a mesenteric band, and in the second instance to occlusion of the celiac axis, superior and inferior mesenteric arteries. In the first patient, the portal venous gas was detected before surgery, and in the second case the gas was observed at laparotomy and was visualized on radiographs of the abdomen taken shortly after death. Both patients died. Portal venous gas can be distinguished radiologically from air in the bile ducts by its characteristic slender branching gas pattern in the periphery of the liver substance. The presence of portal gas in the adult indicates intestinal necrosis in the majority of cases and should lead to early operative intervention.
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PMID:Gas in the portal vein: a report of two cases. 591 80

A 48 year old patient with resistant coeliac disease developed prolonged unexplained pyrexia after surgery for small bowel volvulus. Despite extensive investigations and intensive antibiotic therapy, he deteriorated and died eight weeks postoperatively and significant isolated pulmonary valve endocarditis was discovered at autopsy. This diagnosis should be considered in all critically ill patients with unexplained pyrexia even in the absence of clinical features of endocarditis and transoesophageal echocardiography performed to exclude or confirm this lesion.
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PMID:Isolated pulmonary valve endocarditis: a rare or an underdiagnosed disease? 780 40

Colonic volvulus is a rare complication of celiac disease. A case is reported of a 46-year-old man with a long-standing history of diarrhea and abdominal distention with a diagnosis of irritable bowel syndrome. After an elective inguinal hernia repair, a cecal volvulus and an ulcerative jejunoileitis developed in the patient that required an extensive intestinal resection. Short bowel syndrome developed and was treated with total parenteral and enteral nutrition. The patient had a poor course after reinitiation of oral diet. Subsequently, celiac sprue was diagnosed and the patient improved with a gluten-free diet.
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PMID:Colonic volvulus and ulcerative jejunoileitis due to occult celiac sprue. 958 89

A 66-year-old man with chronic obstructive lung disease was admitted to our hospital, presenting with mesenteric volvulus and mild liver injury. A superior mesenteric angiogram revealed that the arteries supplying the small intestine were twisted in the arterial phase, while the portal vein was not visualized in the late phase. A celiac angiogram demonstrated that portal blood flow from the splenic venous return was maintained. The patient's symptoms had almost resolved the day after admission, and his serum transaminases level had gradually decreased to normal with conservative therapy. A superior mesenteric angiogram on the 13th hospital day showed a normal arteriogram and the portal vein demonstrated blood flow from the superior mesenteric vein. Liver biopsy revealed hemorrhagic necrosis around the central veins, which was compatible with ischemic hepatitis. Since the patient's O2 saturation level on admission was not low enough to have caused ischemic hepatitis by itself, we suspect that a sudden decrease in portal blood flow was the additional factor that allowed the threshold for the initiation of ischemic liver damage to be reached.
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PMID:Ischemic hepatitis induced by mesenteric volvulus in a patient with chronic obstructive lung disease. 1068 Jun 75

Volvulus of the intestine has recently been observed in three patients with idiopathic steatorrhea in relapse. Two patients gave a history of intermittent abdominal pain, distension and obstipation. Radiographic studies during these attacks revealed obstruction at the level of the sigmoid colon. Reduction under proctoscopic control was achieved in one instance, spontaneous resolution occurring in the other. The third patient presented as a surgical emergency and underwent operative reduction of a small intestinal volvulus. Persistence of diarrhea and weight loss postoperatively led to further investigation and a diagnosis of idiopathic steatorrhea. In all cases, treatment resulted in clinical remission with a coincident disappearance of obstructive intestinal symptoms. The pathogenesis of volvulus in sprue is poorly understood. Atonicity and dilatation of the bowel and stretching of the mesentery likely represent important factors. The symptoms of recurrent abdominal pain and distension in idiopathic steatorrhea necessitate an increased awareness of intestinal volvulus as a complication of this disease.
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PMID:Intestinal volvulus in idiopathic steatorrhea. 1399 48