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

Gastrointestinal disease in middle Africa is changing. The traditional patterns were high frequencies of parasitic and infectious diseases and sigmoid volvulus, and low incidences of colonic polyps, carcinoma of the colon, appendicitis, diverticulosis, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. The current disease patterns are compared with those for gastrointestinal disease in developed countries and etiological factors are discussed.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of chronic intestinal disease in middle Africa. 44 97

A review of the surgical and autopsy records from two general hospitals in La Paz, Bolivia, discloses an incidence of colon and rectal disease, excluding hemorrhoids, of 0.6 per cent (138 of 22,361 surgical cases) and 2.5 per cent (16 of 640 consecutive autopsies). Acquired megacolon complicated by volvulus represented more than half of all cases in the surgical series. Ulcerative colitis, diverticular disease, and neoplastic polyps represented less than 10 per cent of the cases of colonic disease. Only ten cases of carcinoma of the colon were seen, whereas five cases of granulomatous colitis or ileocolitis were detected in the same surgical material. Among sixty-four lesions of the rectum, so-called retention polyps accounted for 54.5 per cent of the cases, with carcinoma next in frequency (25 per cent), and the remainder being different varieties of inflammatory conditions. In the autopsy material almost half of the cases were infectious conditions, followed by congenital malformations and complicated acquired megacolon. No case of diverticular disease of the colon or neoplastic polyps was seen, and there was only one case of cancer of the large bowel. Because of the high incidence of acquired megacolon and the low incidence of cancer, ulcerative colitis, adenomatous polyps, and diverticular disease of the colon, possible etiopathogenic factors of these conditions are discussed in comparison with their incidence in other developed and developing countries of the world.
...
PMID:Diseases of the colon and rectum in Bolivia. 113 Jun 11

The double stapling technique for rectal reconstruction after resection involves closing the lower rectal segment with a linear stapler and performing the anastomosis using a circular stapler across the linear staple row. The purpose of this report is to review the results of double stapling, present our experience, and draw conclusions from the material available. We have utilized the double stapling technique in 80 patients for primary anastomoses and in 11 patients for secondary anastomoses following Hartmann procedures. Twenty-one anastomoses were at or near the dentate line. Fifty-six patients had rectal carcinoma, 29 patients had diverticulitis, 3 patients had carcinoma of the ovary, and 1 patient each had traumatic rectal perforation, volvulus, or rectal prolapse. Complications in the total 91 patients included 3 anastomotic leaks (3.3%), 1 postoperative hemoperitoneum (1.1%), and 3 strictures (3.3%). No anastomosis was protected by diverting colostomy. There were no operative deaths. Of 43 patients with cancer available for follow-up, 4 patients have developed local recurrence. The technique has been modified for ileoanal anastomosis during abdominal restorative proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis and familial polyposis and early results are favorable. The double stapling technique provides a safe method for rectal reconstruction at or near the dentate line and offers the following advantages over other stapler techniques: (1) It eliminates the frustrating distal pursestring; (2) The rectal segment is not opened, minimizing contamination; and (3) It avoids gathering the sometimes generous circumference of the rectum on a pursestring thus allowing a more precise distal donut.
...
PMID:Results of the double stapling procedure in pelvic surgery. 146 21

There are three main groups of indications of lower digestive tract endoscopy: (1) endoscopy may be performed to detect adenomatous polyps and thus prevent colorectal cancer by systematic excision of these polyps before they become invasive malignancies; (2) it may also be performed in patients whose symptoms (e.g. pain, diarrhoea or anaemia) may be due to a lesion of the colon. It usually provides evidence of such diseases as colorectal adenocarcinoma, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, pseudomembranous colitis, post-irradiation colitis, collagen colitis, ischaemic colitis or colonic angiodysplasia; (3) finally, emergency endoscopy can be used in case of rectal haemorrhage, where it is often completed by haemostasis, or in case of volvulus, where it removes the occlusion.
...
PMID:[The main indications for lower endoscopies]. 200 76

Athymic nude mice, injected with a cell-free filtrate of intestinal tissue from patients with Crohn's disease, have been shown to express antigens in their lymph nodes to which sera from patients with Crohn's disease contain antibodies. In the present study, immune reactivity was assessed with a histochemical indirect immunoperoxidase assay on paraplast-embedded tissue sections. The reactive lymph node cells were identified as sinus macrophages. We confirmed earlier findings of immunofluorescence studies that the reaction showed some antibody specificity, the proportion of patients with Crohn's disease who were positive (84%) being higher than of patients with ulcerative colitis (29%). However, reactivity of Crohn's disease sera was found to be antigen nonspecific, as it was equally observed with lymph nodes of mice primed with saline or with homogenates from patients with ulcerative colitis, diverticulitis, or volvulus. Hence, this nude mouse model does not seem appropriate to identify a transmissible etiology of Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Seroreactivity of patients with Crohn's disease with lymph nodes of primed nude mice is independent of the tissue used for priming. 237 96

The site and nature of lesions producing gastrointestinal bleeding was evaluated in pediatric patients admitted to Tokai University Hospital. The differential diagnosis was possible based upon the character of the bleeding and the age of the patient. Upper endoscopy is the diagnostic maneuver of choice in evaluating the upper gastrointestinal bleeders. Sigmoidoscopy, colonoscopy, technetium scans, tagged red cell scans and intraoperative angiography were helpful in locating bleeding sites of lower bleeders. Common causes of bleeding were as follows: Hemorrhagic disease, necrotizing enterocolitis, and midgut volvulus in neonates; intussusception and internal hernia in infants; juvenile polyp and infectious diarrhea in children; duodenal ulcer and ulcerative colitis in adolescents. Gastro-duodenal ulcers were found in all age groups. One neonate died of indomethacin induced bleeding, however, bleeding from acute ulcer was usually controlled by conservative treatments. Increasing frequency of variceal bleeding due to portal hypertension after successful Kasai procedure for congenital biliary atresia was emphasized.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal bleeding in children]. 258 65

The expression of gastrointestinal cancer antigen, CA 19-9, and of carcinoma-associated antigen, CA-50, was studied in formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue from 18 patients with ulcerative colitis, 29 with Crohn's disease in the colon, four with diverticular disease, and eight with sigmoid volvulus. None of the patients with inflammatory bowel disease showed strong dysplasia or had manifest carcinoma. Both antigens were expressed frequently in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Of the 18 patients with ulcerative colitis, 17 were positive for both CA 19-9 and CA-50, and of the 29 with Crohn's colitis, 21 were positive for CA 19-9 and 22 for CA-50. No distinct differences in antigenic expression were found between Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. CA-50 was expressed in normal colonic mucosa from 10 of 12 patients with sigmoid volvulus or diverticular disease, and such mucosa was positive for CA 19-9 in three of the four patients with diverticular disease and in two of the eight patients with sigmoid volvulus. It is concluded that immunodetection of CA-50 or CA 19-9 is of limited value in the differential diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease. The usefulness of these antigens as markers for precancerous changes in inflammatory bowel disease is also doubtful, since the expression is also frequent in cases of inflammatory lesions, with no obviously increased risk of malignancy.
...
PMID:Expression of the carcinoma-associated antigens CA 19-9 and CA-50 in inflammatory bowel disease. 347 29

Geographic location of a population plays a significant role in the interpretation of symptoms of some diseases of the colon. Because diverticular disease of the colon is very rare in the tropics, frank rectal bleeding, which may be suggestive of bleeding diverticulosis when it occurs in a temperate region, is suggestive of a bleeding ileal typhoid ulcer eroding terminal branches of the superior mesenteric artery. Similarly, symptoms suggestive of ulcerative colitis in a temperate region are suggestive of amebic colitis in the tropics. Anatomic variation also plays a part in the nature of some disease processes. The high incidence of freely mobile cecum and ascending colon and the freely mobile redundant sigmoid colon, seen in a tropical population, play a part in the frequent occurrence of nontumid intussusception, relatively high incidence of sigmoid volvulus, and relatively high incidence of rectal prolapse seen in the area.
...
PMID:Differences between surgical colorectal conditions seen in the temperate and tropical regions. 681 61

In order to examine the presentation and course of Crohn's disease (CD) versus those of ulcerative colitis (UC) in children < or = 10 years of age, a retrospective review of children < or = 10 years old with inflammatory bowel disease singled out 40 patients and compared their findings with those of 38 children with UC. The mean age at onset was 7.5 years for CD, as compared with 5.9 years for UC. A family history of inflammatory bowel disease was present in 13 patients (32%). Abdominal pain (97%), diarrhea (78%), and weight loss (88%) were the major initial complaints, with growth retardation present in 12 (30%) children. At onset, four children had diffuse small-bowel disease, nine had terminal ileal disease, 15 had ileocolitis, and 12 had colitis; at the end of the study two had diffuse small-bowel disease, four had terminal ileal disease, 25 had ileocolitis, and seven had colitis. Extra-intestinal manifestations increased with duration of disease. Although the number of recurrences did not differ greatly between groups, those with ileocolitis and colitis needed longer steroid therapy and more days in hospital than did those with only small-bowel disease. Operation was required in 42.5% of children with CD, as compared with 5% of those with UC, with six CD children (35%) requiring later reoperation for recurrent disease or fistula and abscess. Two children died from causes unrelated to their disease (gastric volvulus, carcinoma of the breast).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Crohn's disease in children 10 years old and younger: comparison with ulcerative colitis. 857 7

A staging classification is proposed by CT findings in 27 patients with acute abdomen, caused by inflammatory colonic non-parasitic pathology. Of the 17 patients with diverticular disease, 4 were stage A (edema/ischemia on thickness of the abdominal wall), 2 were stage B (partial intramural infarction on the abdominal wall) and 3 were stage C (abscess/peritonitis and obstruction/vascular strangulation). None of the patients in the series were stage D (ischemia/infarction of the colonic wall with dilatation). Of the 4 patients with ulcerative colitis, 3 were stage A and 1 in stage C. Of the 3 patients with Crohn's disease, 2 were stage A and 1 was in stage C. Classified as stage D were 1 pseudomembranous colitis, 1 volvulus and 1 idiopathic megacolon. Clinical severity was in parallel with CT stages that gave better information on the progression of the pathology. Staging by CT in acute abdomen caused by inflammatory colonic non-parasitic pathology could be useful in therapeutics.
...
PMID:Acute abdomen caused by inflammatory colonic non-parasitic pathology: staging by CT. 1042 Oct 16


1 2 Next >>