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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of pelvic actinomycosis, now seen as a complication of intrauterine contraceptive devices, is reported. A 32-year old nulliparous women who had developed pain and irregular bleeding over the previous month presented initially for removal of a Dalkon shield IUD. For the previous 5 years the IUD had caused no symptoms. The Dalkon shield could not be removed, and vaginal examination revealed a tender mass in the pouch of Douglas. The patient was hospitalized for a laparoscopy and removal of the IUD under general anesthesia. Laparoscopy revealed an acute pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) with pus leaking from bilteral pyosalpinges. The IUD was removed, and the patient was treated with parenterally by administered penicillin and streptomycin for 5 days. 3 weeks later the patient was readmitted, complaining of nausea, vomiting and malaise. Clinically she was febrile, with signs of an acute abdomen. On vaginal examination, a large tender mass was palpable in the pouch of Douglas, and the blood film revealed a leukocytosis. When her condition failed to improve after treatment with penicillin and streptomycin, a laparotomy was performed. Gross PID was found with a large ruptured tubo-ovarian abscess on the right side. A total abdominal hysterectomy with bilteral salpingo-oophorectomy was performed. After the removal of the infected organs, her temperature dropped and her condition improved rapidly. Pathological findings are reported.
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PMID:Pelvic actinomycosis in association with an intrauterine contraceptive device. 29 10

In Ohio, a 33-year old woman who had never had an ectopic pregnancy presented at an emergency facility not physically attached to a hospital with abdominal pain over 24 hours which had become more intense during the preceding 4 hours. She did not have vaginal bleeding, diarrhea, vomiting, or pain while urinating. 2 weeks earlier she had a voluntary intrauterine abortion at 8 weeks' gestation. She had intercourse 1 week before coming to the emergency facility. She had widespread tenderness in her abdomen, especially in the lower areas. Blood cell studies suggested an infection. The attending physician presumed her to have pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) as a result of either sexual intercourse or the elective abortion. The physician called for a urinary beta human chorionic gonadotropin test to determine whether placental tissue remained in the uterus. It was positive. 60 minutes after admission, the supine patient's pain increased and her blood pressure dropped to 80/50 mm Hg from 100/60 mm Hg at admission. After administering Ringer's solution, the health team sat her up and she fainted. A repeat cell count indicated sepsis. Her blood pressure decreased to 60 by Doppler and the physician continued to give her fluids and began dopamine. After the team stabilized her, they transferred her to a hospital. Her private physician examined her and then began surgery. The physician found a tubal pregnancy and removed the affected tube and ovary. She recuperated completely. Combined intrauterine and extrauterine pregnancy occurs once in every 30,000 cases. Previous PID, use of ovulation inducing medication, and in vitro fertilization with embryo transfer increases the likelihood of this type of pregnancy occurring. Physicians should consider this possibility if a woman has any of these histories and a combination of abdominal pain, adnexal mass with pain and tenderness, peritoneal irritation, and an enlarged uterus.
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PMID:Ruptured ectopic pregnancy in a patient with a recent intrauterine abortion. 157 Sep 21

Primary pneumococcal peritonitis is an uncommon condition 1st identified in 1885. It occurs when peritoneal inflammation is present in the absence of an intraabdominal source of infection. In the preantibiotic era, the condition accounted for 2% of childhood abdominal emergencies largely among girls aged 2-10 years. Mortality was 42-100%, with death sometimes occurring within 48 hours of the onset of symptoms. This condition now present in female adults, is associated with IUD use, and is comparatively common in India. Consideration should therefore be given to the existence of primary pneumococcal peritonitis when diagnosing and managing abdominal emergencies. The pneumococcus may enter the peritoneal cavity via the female genital tract, blood, or through transmural spread from the gastrointestinal tract. No evidence supports a relationship between type of IUD and/or length of time in place, and the onset of peritonitis. Given pneumococcus' commensal existence in the upper respiratory tract, urogenital sex may facilitate its entrance to the peritoneal cavity through the female genital tract. Abdominal pain, diarrhea, and vomiting generally present, while the patient may also be pyrexial and dehydrated. In diagnosing this condition, the practitioner may confuse it with acute appendicitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, or gastroenteritis if in the early stages of peritonitis. Diagnosis is often confirmed only thorough laparotomy, but abdominal paracentesis and/or abdominal ultrasound may also be employed as diagnostic aids. Laparotomy and a regime of antibiotics is the preferred treatment. 2 case studies are discussed.
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PMID:Primary pneumococcal peritonitis. 159 42

Risk factors for ectopic pregnancy include previous ectopic pregnancy, current intrauterine device use, prior fallopian tube surgery, previous pelvic inflammatory disease and a prior history of infertility. Abdominal pain is the most common symptom, followed by amenorrhea or vaginal bleeding, nausea, vomiting, syncope and dizziness. Referred shoulder pain following the onset of abdominal pain is characteristic of intraperitoneal bleeding and, in the appropriate clinical setting, strongly suggests a ruptured ectopic pregnancy. A coordinated evaluation includes measurement of serum human chorionic gonadotropin concentration and transabdominal or, preferably, transvaginal ultrasonography. Treatment is primarily by one of a variety of surgical techniques. Medical therapy with methotrexate or other drugs is currently under investigation.
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PMID:Management of ectopic pregnancy. 218 38

In Israel, 40 primigravid women due to undergo 1st trimester termination of pregnancy were randomly selected for intracervical application of 1 mg prostaglandin E2 in gel or gel only as placebo. In the PGE2-gel group, a marked dilatation of the cervical canal was obtained, with post-gel treatment mean Hegar dilatation of 11.18 mm in that group, compared to 4.4 mm in the control group (P 0.001). Moreover, 16 (80%) patients in the PGE2-gel group had a complete abortion, 1 (5%) patient had an incomplete abortion, and in the remaining 3 (15%) patients, fetal demise was observed. The mean induction-abortion interval in this group was 7.5 h. In the placebo group, none of the above effects were observed. The only side effect noted was vomiting, which occurred in 5 (25%) of the patients in the PGE2-gel group. Termination of pregnancy was found to be easier in the PGE2-gel group, compared to the placebo group. Major complications such as tear of the cervix or perforation of the uterus were not recorded in the 2 groups. On examination of the patients 4 weeks later, none of them showed any signs of pelvic inflammatory disease, but 1 patient in the placebo group complained of irregular bleeding and needed recuretage. In the present study patients were hospitalized, but the proceedure can be adapted to an out-patient setting with application of the drug in the early morning and termination by afternoon.
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PMID:Intracervical administration of prostaglandin E2-gel prior to therapeutic abortion: a prospective randomized double-blind study. 290 87

Diagnosis of the cause of lower abdominal pain in women may be difficult because appendicitis and pelvic inflammatory disease often present similarly. In a prospective study of 118 women, we found that several criteria are useful in establishing this differential. These include (1) duration of symptoms, (2) the presence of nausea, vomiting or both, (3) a history of venereal disease, (4) cervical motion tenderness, (5) adnexal tenderness, and (6) isolated peritoneal signs in the right lower quadrant. Although no single finding can define the diagnosis, the history and physical findings reported herein provide a number of criteria which, when taken together, will usually allow a confident diagnosis of either appendicitis or pelvic inflammatory disease to be made. Attention to these items can improve precision in diagnosis and lessen the incidence of unnecessary laparotomy, which carries a well-documented complication rate of 10 to 20 percent.
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PMID:Differential diagnosis of appendicitis and pelvic inflammatory disease. A prospective analysis. 316 Feb 52

The efficacy and safety of two antibiotic combination (clindamycin + gentamycin [C + G] versus metronidazole + gentamycin [M + G]) have been compared in 45 in-patients suffering from pelvic inflammatory disease in a clinical prospective randomized trial. The rates of clinical and bacteriological recovery reached respectively 85.7% and 71.4% for C + G group compared to 83.3% and 78.6% for M + G group (no significant differences). Side effects (vomiting, gastralgia and vaginal mycosis) developed in four occasions in each group. The most frequently isolated organisms were chlamydiae, E. coli and Neisseria gonorrheae (around 50% of overall isolated organisms). Due to the lack of significant differences between the two antibiotic combinations, the final choice will depend on potential risks generated by these products.
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PMID:[Prospective randomized study comparing the efficacy and tolerance of clindamycin-gentamycin versus metronidazole-gentamycin in acute utero-adnexal infections in hospitalized patients]. 355 61

This study analyzes the clinicopathologic findings in patients with ectopic pregnancy (EP), and deals with the differential diagnosis of the EP, intrauterine pregnancy (IUP), and pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). We evaluated 346 patients with suspected EP. Among those, 119 patients had EP, 82 had IUP, and 55 had PID without pregnancy. The incidence of EP was 1/32.9 live births. Comparing with the other groups, the patients with EP were slightly older, gave a history of previous pregnancies, had acute abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, and fainting, and had direct and rebound abdominal tenderness, pain on motion of the cervix, absence of a pelvic mass, and bilateral adnexal or cul de sac fullness. Culdocentesis was accurate in 95.1% of EP cases. Salpingectomy was performed in 89.9% of the patients with EP. The patients with EP had gross evidence of PID at the surgery in 31% and microscopic evidence of tubal inflammation in 19.4% of cases.
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PMID:Ectopic pregnancy. A prospective study on differential diagnosis. 726 61

A thirty-three year old female presented to our emergency department complaining of severe abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting. On physical examination she was hypotensive with a firm, tender abdomen, cervical motion tenderness and a diffuse erythematous rash. A surgical diagnosis of Acute Pelvic Inflammatory Disease was made during laparoscopy. Coagulant studies, liver function tests, culture results, and the desquamation of the patient's palms led to the additional diagnosis of Toxic Shock Syndrome. A literature search failed to reveal any similar cases of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) and Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS) occurring concomitantly. Patients may present severely ill with either of these disease entities but potential for serious illness is greater when both of these syndromes occur in the same patient. We conclude that in patients with a similar presentation, the symptoms should not be attributed completely to PID without further investigation and consideration of a concomitant disease process including TSS.
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PMID:A 33-year-old white female with abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and hypotension. 834 May 81

A multicenter randomized comparative trial was done to assess the safety and efficacy of oral ofloxacin (400 mg twice daily for 10 days) versus cefoxitin (2 g intramuscularly) followed by doxycycline (100 mg twice daily orally for 10 days) for the outpatient treatment of uncomplicated pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Neisseria gonorrhoeae (GC) grew on pretreatment endocervical cultures from 43 of 268 women (16%), and in 30 of 247 women (12%) cultures were positive for Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct). Ninety-five percent (122/128) of the women treated with the ofloxacin regimen and 93% (112/121) of those treated with the cefoxitin/doxycycline regimen had cure or improvement on examination at a minimum of one follow-up visit. All GC species were eradicated by both ofloxacin and cefoxitin. Among women who returned for follow-up, the eradication of C trachomatis was 88% (15/17) for the cefoxitin/doxycycline group and 100% (18/18) for ofloxacin. Side effects were more prevalent in the cefoxitin/doxycycline group (15%) than in the ofloxacin group (7%), nausea/vomiting being the most frequent adverse effect. In this study, it appears that ofloxacin and cefoxitin/doxycycline have similar clinical effectiveness for the outpatient treatment of uncomplicated pelvic inflammatory disease.
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PMID:Multicenter randomized trial of ofloxacin versus cefoxitin and doxycycline in outpatient treatment of pelvic inflammatory disease. Ambulatory PID Research Group. 850 77


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