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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 43-year-old Korean woman with biliary ascariasis accompanied by
cholelithiasis
is reported. Her chief complaints were abdominal pain, nausea, and
vomiting
. She had the past history of several attacks of abdominal pain in her childhood. Biliary stones were recovered from the left hepatic duct after cholecystectomy, which contained degenerated cuticle or body wall, and numerous eggs of Ascaris lumbricoides. It is strongly suggested that the biliary stones were formed from the dead Ascaris worm(s). This is a rare case of biliary ascariasis during the recent 5 years in Korea.
...
PMID:A case of biliary ascariasis accompanied by cholelithiasis. 851 3
From 1990 through 1993, we treated 36 patients with recurrent typical biliary colic but who showed no ultrasonic evidence of
cholelithiasis
by laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Associated symptoms included nausea (75%), bloating (56%), fatty-food intolerance (53%),
vomiting
(17%), weight loss (31%), bowel irregularity (28%), reflux or dyspepsia (25%), and fever (17%). Diagnostic evaluation included ultrasound (100%), upper gastrointestinal series (36%), oral cholecystogram (14%), computed tomographic scan (39%), endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (17%), upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (14%), and hepatobiliary scan (92%). Quantitative hepatobiliary scans in 33 patients revealed a low gallbladder ejection fraction (EF) of less than 35% in 29 patients (88%; mean EF = 9%), and 13 patients experienced reproducible pain after cholecystokinin provocation. All patients underwent attempted laparoscopic cholecystectomy; one case of unsuspected acute acalculous cholecystitis was converted to open laparotomy because of unclear anatomy. Gross and histological examination of the gallbladders revealed chronic inflammation (83%), cholesterolosis (31%), cholesterol crystals or small stones (17%), acute inflammation (8%), polyps (6%), and normal histology (6%); however, blind retrospective scoring of gallbladders revealed significant chronic inflammation in only 38%. In the 2 to 40 months (mean, 14 months) since operation, there have been no deaths (97% follow-up). Laparoscopic cholecystectomy relieved pain in 93% of patients with a low preoperative EF compared with 75% of patients with a normal EF (nonsignificant p value). Persistent abdominal or gastrointestinal complaints included flatulence (31%), loose stools or fecal urgency (29%), belching (29%), indigestion (20%), nausea (11%), and "typical" gallbladder pain (9%). We conclude that many patients with symptoms of biliary colic and scintigraphic evidence of biliary dyskinesia have histologic findings of chronic cholecystitis. Although laparoscopic cholecystectomy usually eliminates biliary colic, persistent nonbiliary complaints are frequent.
...
PMID:Chronic acalculous cholecystitis: laparoscopic treatment. 868 Jun 33
Actinomycotic cholecystitis is rare. We report a 65-year-old woman who was admitted with repeated attacks of pain in the abdomen and
vomiting
. Clinical and laboratory findings suggested the diagnosis of cholecystitis with
cholelithiasis
. At cholecystectomy the gall bladder was inflamed with a small perforation, and contained many calculi. Gram's staining of the gall bladder wall revealed Gram-positive actinomycotic colonies.
...
PMID:Actinomycotic cholecystitis. 911 78
Gallstones
are common and occur asymptomatically or symptomatically with or without complications. Treatment is only required for symptomatic
gallstones
and complications in
gallstones
. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the treatment of choice for symptomatic
gallstones
and is performed with an increasing frequency. One may fear, that the indications for cholecystectomy have changed, and surgery is now undertaken for a lesser degree of morbidity. Cholecystectomy does not increase life expectancy, and 20-30% of patients cholecystectomized for symptomatic
gallstones
complain of abdominal pain of unknown origin after the operation. New valid parameters in order to predict which patients will benefit from cholecystectomy are therefore necessary. Symptoms specific to
gallstones
are not precisely known, and greatest success in treatment seems to be related to the occurrence of severe, often steady pain, of hours' duration, often located in the epigastrium or upper right quadrant, with or without radiation and/or
vomiting
. Dyspepsia alone is not an indication for cholecystectomy. Psychological vulnerability may predict a poor outcome after cholecystectomy and should lead to reconsideration of the indication for surgery.
...
PMID:[Uncomplicated gallstones: who should be operated on?]. 930 73
The main complications of endoscopic retrograde cholangiography and sphincterotomy are bleeding, pancreatitis, perforation and sepsis. Two cases of unexplained prolonged cholestatic jaundice in patients who underwent endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) for biliary obstruction due to choledocholithiasis are reported. The patients were admitted because of right upper quadrant pain,
vomiting
and jaundice. Laboratory tests showed increased levels of total and conjugated serum bilirubin and increased alkaline phosphatase. Ultrasound examination showed
cholelithiasis
and choledocholithiasis with bile duct dilatation. ERC with sphincterotomy was performed and
gallstones
obstructing the common bile duct were removed endoscopically. Following ERC and despite complete patency of the biliary tree, a progressive increase of total and conjugated bilirubin and of alkaline phosphatase was noted, associated with itching and total stool discoloration. The insertion of nasobiliary drain did not improve the jaundice. Prednisolone treatment for 12 days was associated with progressive restoration of serum bilirubin alkaline phosphatase to normal levels. It was postulated that the radiocontrast material used may have acted toxically on the liver with disruption of the canalicular plasma membrane. It is proposed that intrahepatic cholestasis should be added in the list of complications of endoscopic retrograde cholangiography.
...
PMID:Prolonged cholestatic jaundice after endoscopic retrograde cholangiography. 922 70
Bouveret's syndrome, or
gallstone
duodenal pyloric obstruction, almost always presents with abdominal pain or
vomiting
. It occurs more commonly in females (65%), with a median age of 68.6 years. The diagnosis is made by endoscopy (60%), upper gastrointestinal series (45%) or by direct abdominal x-ray (23%). The syndrome is mainly treated by surgery (93%), but recently, it has also been treated by endoscopy or extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. The mortality rate has improved from 33%, as was the case before 1968, to 12% in recent years. Herein we report the case of a 79-year-old female with Bouveret's syndrome.
...
PMID:Bouveret's syndrome: case report and review of the literature. 926 92
Gastric outlet obstruction caused by a large
gallstone
in the duodenum or pylorus (Bouveret's syndrome) is a rare complication of
gallstone
disease. The presenting symptoms are often nonspecific and include nausea,
vomiting
, epigastric pain and a history of gallbladder disease. Although the diagnosis is established only at surgery in many cases, preoperative recognition by imaging techniques and endoscopy is desirable. Surgical treatment aims at removal of the ectopic
gallstone
, closure of the fistula and cholecystectomy. A case of Bouveret's syndrome is presented where endoscopic extraction of the duodenal
gallstone
was accomplished providing definitive treatment for this patient.
...
PMID:Duodenal obstruction by a gallstone (Bouveret's syndrome) managed by endoscopic stone extraction: a case report and review. 958 39
Thirty-one patients with biliary enteric fistula who were operated on over a 19-year period (1976-1994) with an incidence of 0.74% in all biliary tract operations were reviewed retrospectively to identify etiologic factors, types of fistulas, signs and symptoms, methods of diagnosis, management and prognosis of the cases. Most common symptoms were abdominal pain, nausea,
vomiting
and jaundice. Two patients had
gallstone
ileus. The majority of the patients had severe concomitant medical illnesses. The exact preoperative diagnosis of a biliary enteric fistula was established in only five (16%) patients. In 81% of the cases fistula was secondary to chronic calculous biliary tract disease. Postoperative complications included wound infection in six (19%), biliary fistula in two (6%) and erosive gastritis in one (3%) patient. Two patients died of intra-abdominal sepsis and two of cardiac failure, with an operative mortality of 13%. Early elective cholecystectomy is recommended to avoid complications of chronic calculous cholecystitis such as bilioenteric fistulas and their increased mortality and morbidity.
...
PMID:Biliary enteric fistulas. 937 75
The expectation that cholecystectomy is effective treatment for symptomatic
gallstones
is not always achieved in surgical practice. The impact of cholecystectomy on the relief of gastrointestinal symptoms was evaluated in 92 patients followed up after surgery for a mean of 31.1 months (range 12-83 months). Abdominal pain continued to be present, or arose de novo, in 28 (30.4%) patients. Pain-free outcome after cholecystectomy was associated with a preoperative clinical diagnosis of biliary colic, fatty food intolerance, and a thick-walled gallbladder on ultrasound (P = 0.02). Logistic regression associated a thick-walled gallbladder, elevated gamma-glutamyl transpetidase, body mass index < 26, fat intolerance, and normal bowel habit with good postoperative results (P = 0.001). Application of each of these five factors to a clinical index failed to predict long-term pain-free outcome after cholecystectomy. Abdominal bloating (P = 0.03), dyspepsia (P < 0.001), heartburn (P < 0.007), fat intolerance (P < 0.001), nausea (P = 0.001) and
vomiting
(P < 0.001) were significantly improved after cholecystectomy, but diarrhoea, constipation and excessive flatus were not. Outcome benefit ratios confirmed that
vomiting
(0.96), nausea (0.87), dyspepsia (0.67), fat intolerance (0.57) and heartburn (0.51) were relieved by surgery. Cholecystectomy improved symptoms compared with a matched control group, suggesting that surgery remains the gold standard treatment of symptomatic
gallstones
.
...
PMID:Is cholecystectomy effective treatment for symptomatic gallstones? Clinical outcome after long-term follow-up. 984 45
We report a case of Bouveret's Syndrome (gastric outlet obstruction by
gallstone
) and
gallstone
emesis
, both of which are very rare, in a 77-year old Ghanaian woman. Diagnosis depends on high index of suspicion and confirmation with endoscopy. Definitive treatment consist of enterotomy plus stone retrieval with primary excision of the diseased gallbladder and repair of the duodenal fistula.
...
PMID:Gallstone impaction in the duodenal bulb: an uncommon cause of gastric outlet obstruction associated with gallstone emesis. 971 20
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