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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of Bochdalek's hernia with
volvulus
of the stomach and extrapulmonary sequestration in an adult. A 27-year-old woman presented acute respiratory failure, pain in the left side of the chest and recurrent
vomiting
of sudden onset. Upon examination there was pain in the left hypochondrium that was not tolerated in decubitus position. A chest film showed an "arch" at the base on the left side and an upper gastrointestinal series revealed
volvulus
of the stomach. After a left thoracotomy, the stomach, spleen and greater omentum were found displaced into the thoracic cavity. After the viscera were confined to the abdomen, the hernia was repaired and the pulmonary sequestration was removed. Two years later, the patient was asymptomatic and a chest film was normal.
...
PMID:[Bochdalek's hernia in an adult with stomach volvulus and extrapulmonary sequestration]. 762 24
Over a four year period, from August 1987 to July 1991, thirteen cases of chronic and recurrent gastric
volvulus
were encountered comprising six paediatric and seven adult patients. In none of the patients was the condition clinically suspected; diagnosis being made only at meticulous upper gastro-intestinal (UGI) barium series. The paediatric patients typically presented with obstructive symptoms of projectile
vomiting
especially after meals and failure to thrive. The adults had variable symptoms of dyspepsia, recurrent intermittent upper abdominal discomfort or pain, occasionally accompanied by
vomiting
or retching mimicking many different upper abdominal conditions, such as peptic ulcer, biliary tract or pancreatic disease but with negative findings at endoscopy and abdominal ultrasound scanning. All cases were organo-axial type of gastric
volvulus
. Associated conditions were small sliding hiatus hernia in two adult cases; partial small bowel malrotation in two cases, high jejunal obstruction also in two cases and congenital hip dislocation in one patient. An infant had umbilical hernia, previous meconium cyst and meconium peritonitis. The condition seems not as uncommon as previously thought; the key to diagnosis being constant awareness, a high index of clinical suspicion and a carefully performed UGI barium series especially during the attack of pain.
...
PMID:Gastric volvulus: more common than previously thought? 765 6
Persistent omphalomesenteric band is a rare cause of
volvulus
or intestinal obstruction. A 7-month-old male infant was brought to this Emergency Room after having shown poor appetite for three days, frequent bilious
vomiting
, and fever for half a day. Physical examination revealed the infant was dehydrated and had slight abdominal distension as well as hypoactive bowel sounds with a tender, ill-defined mass over right lower quadrant. Radiography and sonography were consistent with distal small bowel obstruction. Emergent laparotomy was done and a fibrous band found extending from the anti-mesenteric border of the ileum to the posterior wall of the umbilicus. Small bowel
volvulus
had occurred around the band and dilated small bowel was noted. An understanding of the embryologic development of these structures and their normal disappearance may assist pediatricians and surgeons to make the correct diagnosis and select the right pathoanatomic approach in surgery.
...
PMID:Intestinal volvulus caused by a persistent omphalomesenteric band: report of one case. 777 49
Malrotation in the neonate is an anomaly for which there are clear indications for surgery. However, the management of the older patient with this entity is not well defined. At Arkansas Children's Hospital, we reviewed our patients who were older than two years of age with malrotation. Between 1978 and 1993, 22 cases ages 2-23 years were identified. The most common presenting symptoms were
vomiting
15 (68%), colicky abdominal pain 12 (55%), and diarrhea 2 (9%). Other symptoms were hematemesis 1 (5%), and constipation 1 (5%). The duration of symptoms averaged 28 months, range 2-96 months. All diagnoses were made by upper gastrointestinal (UGI) series, except for one that was recognized during an exploratory laparotomy for an intestinal duplication. A Ladd's procedure with appendectomy was performed in all cases. A significant number of patients in our series (41%) were found to have either a
volvulus
or internal hernia at exploration that was not clearly demonstrated by the diagnostic studies. Intestinal resection was performed in two patients for ischemic bowel. There were no perioperative deaths. Postoperative complications consisted of a wound infection in one patient. Total relief of symptoms occurred in 64% of patients. All patients with
volvulus
or internal hernia had resolution of symptoms, and all patients reported partial relief of their chronic symptoms. Surgical therapy eliminates the possibility of loss of bowel from
volvulus
or internal hernia, which is not always evident on diagnostic radiographic examination. Surgery is also highly effective in alleviating the chronic symptoms in these children. We believe, therefore, that surgical treatment is clearly indicated in the older child with proven malrotation.
...
PMID:Malrotation in the older child: surgical management, treatment, and outcome. 785 73
In a retrospective study of hospital records over a 50-year period, data on 32 patients who died as a result of intestinal obstruction are presented and compared with comparison groups and national mortality statistics. There was a higher incidence and lower mean age at death of fatal intestinal obstruction compared with the total national population. The mean age at death significantly increased over the study period.
Intestinal volvulus
was a common cause of obstruction particularly in those with cerebral palsy. There was a high prevalence of chronic constipation and megacolon. Foreign-body obstruction was de facto related to pica, but overall, there was a low prevalence of pica. Overall, mean IQ was low, but only significantly so in the male subjects. The length of acute illness was short; in 22 patients it was less than 24 h.
Vomiting
and abdominal distension were often absent and abdominal signs were recorded only in five patients. Pain or distress was recorded in only nine patients. Only eight patients were correctly diagnosed before death and only two had surgery. The results suggest that fatal intestinal obstruction is more common in mentally handicapped people and chronic constipation and megacolon are risk factors. Intestinal obstruction in mentally handicapped people can present late and with deceptively minimal signs and symptoms.
...
PMID:Fatal intestinal obstruction in the mentally handicapped. 794 92
A 72-year-old woman had been experiencing upper abdominal pain and
vomiting
for 2 years. On physical examination the abdomen was swollen and pressure sensitive. She had a leukocytosis (11,400/microliter) and hypokalaemia (3.6 mmol/l). X-ray films of the chest and abdomen revealed a large gastric air-bubble with two fluid levels of different height and an elevated left diaphragm, findings which suggested gastric
volvulus
. Most of the fluid was evacuated via a nasogastric tube. The stomach interior was difficult to examine by gastroscopy: it was only after withdrawal of the gastroscope from the duodenum that a normal gastric architecture was demonstrated, the
volvulus
apparently having been reduced during the gastroscopy. The gastric mucosa showed ulcerations and erosions. Gastropexy by gluing together the peritoneal layers was undertaken via dual percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. The catheters were removed after 4 weeks when the ulcerations had healed. The patient has been free of symptoms for more than a year so far.
...
PMID:[Treatment of an intermittent stomach volvulus using gastropexy via percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy]. 798 66
The case of an 11-year-old girl with a history of chondrodysplasia punctata is reported. She presented with a clinical picture of abdominal pain and
vomiting
. At surgical intervention an organo-axial gastric
volvulus
was found and a single derotation was performed. Three weeks after discharge the patient presented abdominal distension and
vomiting
. In a plain abdominal X-ray film a gastric dilation was appreciated and a new
volvulus
was detected by means of a contrast radiogram. The diagnosis was confirmed at surgery and a gastropexy was performed without
volvulus
relapse.
...
PMID:[Stomach volvulus in a female patient with chondrodysplasia punctata]. 799 20
The definition of
volvulus
is an axial twist of a portion of the gastrointestinal tract along its mesentery. The involved bowel is obstructed partially or completely with a variable degree of arterial and venous occlusion. The colon is the most common site for
volvulus
. The splenic flexure is the least common site of colonic
volvulus
. We experienced a case of the
volvulus
of the splenic flexure. It will be the 30th case of the
volvulus
involving the splenic flexure in the English literature, to our knowledge. A 30-year-old woman was admitted due to abdominal pain and distention with
vomiting
. An emergency barium study revealed characteristic "bird beak" sign. Surgery was performed resecting the involved colon of splenic flexure. The result was excellent.
...
PMID:Volvulus of the splenic flexure of the colon. 800 3
A high-grade duodenal stenosis in adults can, in rare cases, be congenital, and its cause is found in an intraduodenally sited membrane. The anamnesis reveals growth disorders with
vomiting
and meteorism and abdominal complaints. A perforation opening in this membrane is the reason for survival into adulthood. The X-ray appearance and deep duodenoscopy make the diagnosis easy.
Volvulus
in cases of malrotation, Ladd's ligaments, annular pancreas, and compression of the duodenum by mesenteric vessels must be considered in the differential diagnosis. When the intraduodenal membrane is resected it is most important to expose the papilla Vateri, since this not uncommonly ends in the area of the septum. If necessary, a duodenoduodenostomy is performed. If the windsock web abnormality is present the duodenum should be opened at the point of attachment of the diaphragm. The construction of a gastrojejunostomy should be avoided.
...
PMID:[Congenital duodenal stenosis in adulthood]. 814 19
Acute gastric volvulus occurred in nine infants and one older child during the past 19 years; all patients had an associated left diaphragmatic anomaly. There were seven examples of eventration of the diaphragm, two of giant hiatal hernia and one Bochdalek hernia. Nine of the ten patients presented with
vomiting
and one with acute respiratory distress. The gastric
volvulus
was mesenteroaxial in eight patients and organoaxial in two. Operative treatment consisted of repair of the diaphragmatic anomaly and gastric fixation in eight patients. Gastric fixation alone was performed in one patient. A single patient died preoperatively and had gastric necrosis at postmortem examination. Of the nine patients treated operatively, all remain alive and well without recurrence. Acute gastric volvulus should be considered in any infant presenting with unexplained
vomiting
in association with a left diaphragm anomaly, and once diagnosed, immediate operation is mandatory.
...
PMID:The pediatric diaphragm in acute gastric volvulus. 814 14
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