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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 19 patients with gastrointestinal tumors the diagnosis was made by ultrasound. 7 patients were examined for further investigation of an abdominal mass; 12 patients, presented with symptoms suggesting malignants, e. g. weight loss,
vomiting
, fever, abdominal pain, and/or anaemia from bloodloss were first investigated by ultrasound. In 5 patients with colon tumors, diagnosed by ultrasound, a resection and anastomosis was possible. 13 cases were found to be inoperable during laparotomy, one patient had an
ileocolitis
Crohn with stenosis. Ultrasonic examination with real-time scanning technique proved to be a valuable method as a screening procedure for patients with suspected gastrointestinal tumors. During the same procedure local (mesenteric) or liver metastases can be detected. A normal abdominal ultrasonography does not exclude malignant intestinal lesions in any location during the early stage and in the region of cardia and rectum even in the more advanced stage.
...
PMID:[The use of ultrasound in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal tumors (author's transl)]. 68 40
Using accepted diagnostic criteria we have selected, for study, 160 patients with Crohn's disease involving the colon. There is a remarkable discrepancy between the clinical diagnosis prior to or at the time of initial admission to this hospital and the diagnosis following definitive investigation and observation of the progression of disease. The peak age incidence occurred in the second decade. The colitis group showed a greater percentage of patients over 30 years of age. Although histopathology was not obtained in all patients, there appeared to be sparing of the ascending colon in a small percentage (9 percent) of patients with
ileocolitis
. Comparison of the clinical features of granulomatous disease limited to the colon and granulomatous
ileocolitis
shows a significantly greater incidence of extraintestinal symptoms and overt bleeding in the former. Nausea,
vomiting
, subacute obstruction, abdominal mass and internal fistulas were substantially more common in
ileocolitis
but the difference was not statistically significant. In this series retroperitoneal abscess did not occur in patients with disease localized to the colon. In the 10 patients with
ileocolitis
who developed an abscess, however, the site of fistula was the colon in four patients. In one of these, the abscess was left-sided.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease of the colon. IV. Clinical features of Crohn's (ileo) colitis. 108 41
Thirty-eight children (21 male, 17 female, age 3-18 years), treated for Crohn disease in two Dutch university centres, were retrospectively studied in order to evaluate the results of conservative treatment and to find out in what way surgical treatment in this age group may have differed from treating adults with this disease. Both groups had an equal distribution of age and sex. Diarrhoea with discharge of blood and mucus, abdominal pain, nausea/
vomiting
, weight loss, fever and general discomfort were the most frequent presenting symptoms. Twenty-three children (60%) showed signs of malabsorption; 4 children (10%) had growth retardation. In 27 children (70%), 63 surgical procedures were performed (2.4 operations per child). There was no surgical mortality. Most operations were performed for
ileocolitis
and colon-only localizations needed most re-operations. Of the surgical procedures performed, 55% were excisional procedures. Already 3 years after the onset of symptoms, 50% of all children had had their first resection, whereas in adults, 50% of the patients undergo surgery 8 years after disease onset. Eight children were treated with split ileostomy. In only one of these children, operated for non-toxic colitis and severe steroid-dependent growth retardation, could the colon eventually be saved. The time between the onset of symptoms and the first operation seems to be shorter in children compared to adults. Severe malabsorption and growth retardation are additional specific indications for surgery for Crohn disease in childhood. The latter combined with non-toxic colitis, may perhaps be the only indication left for performing split ileostomy in Crohn disease.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of Crohn disease in children and adolescents; how conservative can the paediatrician be? 822 1
A case of fatal strongyloidiasis associated with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1) infection is described in a 45-year-old West Indian man living in an area endemic for both strongyloidiasis and HTLV-1 infection. Clinical presentation was typical with severe diarrhea,
vomiting
, and progressive weight loss. Stool microscopy revealed Strongyloides stercoralis rhabditiform larvae. Despite treatment with thiabendazole, the patient died. Autopsy findings revealed severe
ileocolitis
due to Strongyloides larvae, right subdiaphragmatic pyogenic abscess, and severe pleuritis of the right lower lobe of the lung. This case illustrates that despite effective antihelmintic therapy, mortality is still high in patients with the hyperinfective state of S. stercoralis. Thus, in patients in areas endemic for both Strongyloides infection and HTLV-1, or in immigrants from these areas, repeated stool microscopy is indicated in patients positive for HTLV-1.
...
PMID:Case study: Fatal strongyloidiasis associated with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 infection. 1171 31
Ileocolitis
associated with spiral bacteria identified as an Anaerobiospirillum sp. was found in six cats. Two cats had acute onset of gastrointestinal signs characterized by
vomiting
and diarrhea in one cat and
vomiting
in another cat, one cat had chronic diarrhea that was refractory to medical therapy; one cat had acute onset of anorexia and lethargy, and two cats had clinical signs that were not related to the gastrointestinal tract. The presence of an Anaerobiospirillum sp. was demonstrated on the basis of ultrastructural morphology of spiral bacteria associated with intestinal lesions and PCR amplification of a genus-specific 16S rRNA gene from affected tissues from each cat. The colons of three clinically healthy cats without lesions and one cat with mild colitis not associated with spiral bacteria were negative for Anaerobiospirillum spp. in the same assay. Comparative nucleotide sequence analysis of cloned PCR products from three affected cats further suggested that the spiral bacteria were closely related to Anaerobiospirillum succiniciproducens.
...
PMID:Ileocolitis associated with Anaerobiospirillum in cats. 1518 62