Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of mesenteric arteritis complicating the post-operative coarctectomy in a 5 day old infant is described. This case was of interest due to diagnostic difficulties and the fatal outcome. In order to avoid the disastrous consequences of this syndrome, the following symptoms including fever, intestinal bleeding, ileus, nausea, vomiting, leucocytosis, hypertension or abdominal pain should alert the physicians and treatment should start without delay.
...
PMID:Postcoarctectomy mesenteric arteritis presenting as neonatal appendicitis. 51 13

Metoclopramide or placebo was administered postoperatively in a randomized, double-blind fashion to 115 patients undergoing laparotomy. The effect of metoclopramide on postoperative adynamic ileus (PAI) was evaluated. The patients were stratified into two groups: Group A--those with laparotomy without a gastrointestinal anastomosis or ostomy procedure, and group B--those with laparotomy undergoing an anastomosis or ostomy procedure. Metoclopramide reduced nausea and emesis postoperatively. However, the only significant effect on postoperative adynamic ileus was an earlier return to tolerance of solid foods in the patients in Group A.
...
PMID:The effects of metoclopramide on postoperative ileus. A randomized double-blind study. 58 60

This is a case report on a rare intrapartum complication consisting of a jejunogastric invagination 17 years after gastrectomy. The clinical systoms such as pain and tender mass in the epigastric region as well as vomiting are similar to an ileus. Immediate interdepartmental consultation is essential because of the very high mortality rate in case of diagnostic failure. Several possible reasons for the invagination are being discussed. The increased intraabdominal pressure during labor is most probably responsible for this life threatening event.
...
PMID:[Intrapartal retrograde jejunogastric invagination after gastrectomy]. 68 58

In terms of a short review indications and applications of infusion therapy in gastroenterology (concerning vomiting, fistulas, diarrhea, ileus and peritonitis) are discussed. It is pointed out that in cases of water and electrolyte deficiency a rigid regimen is not reasonable. If possible a balance should be obtained. Parenteral nutrition is applied in obstructions of the upper gastrointestinal tract and in maldigestion and malabsorption.
...
PMID:[Infusion therapy in gastrointestinal diseases]. 81 18

Abdominal wound dehiscence is a surgical complication with a high morbidity rate but which is associated with predictable and preventable factors. During a 10 year period (1966 to 1975) at the New York Lying-In Hospital, 70 cases were found on the obstetric-gynecologic service, and these cases were analyzed to see why dehiscence remains a problem. Those factors contributing to dehiscence include obesity, pre-existing pulmonary and cardiovascular problems, vertical incisions, the triad of ileus, vomiting, and coughing, and, to a lesser extent, hypoproteinemia, fluid and electrolyte imbalance, and wound infection. The incidence of abdominal wound dehiscence would be much lower if high-risk patients were identified, adequate pulmonary toilet was used, ileus was promptly treated with abdominal decompression, and strict attention was paid to electrolyte and protein balance in the pre- and post-operative period. The management of abdominal wound dehiscence is also discussed.
...
PMID:Abdominal wound dehiscence. 87 48

We presented 12 patients with invasive bladder cancer treated by the subselective intra-arterial COMPA chemotherapy. COMPA was administered up to an average of 3.3 courses (ranged from 2 to 6 courses) every 2 or 3 weeks, consisting of cisplatin: 15 mg/M2 on days 4 and 5; vincristine (oncovin): 0.6 mg/M2 on days 1 and 2; methotrexate: 5 mg/M2 on days 2 and 3; peplomycin: 5 mg/body on days 1, 2 and 3; and adriamycin: 10 mg/M2 on day 4. These were injected through a teflon catheter the tip of which was placed just proximal to the aortic bifurcation, and another tip was led through a subcutaneous tunnel from the inguinally punctured area to the anterior chest wall. The 12 patients, 7 men and 5 women, ranged in age from 53 to 73 (mean: 67) years. Histopathologically 11 had transitional cell carcinoma and one had adenocarcinoma. Malignant gradings were grade 2 in 8 patients, and grade 3 in 4. The stagings were T2 in 3 patients, T3 in 5, T4 in 4 and only one had bony metastasis. Of the 12 patients, 10 were alive at the last follow-up with a mean duration of 36 months (range: 16 to 49). Six patients achieved a complete remission, four achieved a partial remission and two were stable. One died of ileus after 16 months and another of progression after 36 months. All the patients received post-chemotherapeutic adjunctive therapies, which were transurethral resection, partial cystectomy, radiation and/or intravesical instillation. The toxicities were not severe, but anorexia, nausea, vomiting, hair loss, numbness of fingers and/or toes, subileus, and leukopenia were noticed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Intra-arterial COMPA chemotherapy for invasive bladder cancer]. 127 59

A 75-year-old black man came to the emergency room because of nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and distension and obstipation. An abdominal radiograph revealed a sigmoid volvulus. This was nonoperatively reduced in the emergency room. Following a mechanical and antibiotic bowel preparation, the patient underwent elective exploration. We report, for the first time, operative treatment of sigmoid volvulus with a laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid colectomy and primary anastomosis. Because of dense fibrous scarring of the sigmoid mesentery produced by chronic mesosigmoiditis, the redundant sigmoid was exteriorized and resected extracorporeally. A stapled, side-to-side, functional end-to-end anastomosis was constructed. The patient experienced little postoperative pain and virtually no postoperative ileus. We believe that laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid resection may offer distinct advantages for the treatment of the typically elderly, debilitated patient in whom sigmoid volvulus develops. Furthermore, because of the characteristic mesosigmoiditis associated with sigmoid volvulus, we suspect that exteriorization and extracorporeal resection may prove the easiest and most rapid laparoscopic approach to this disease.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid colectomy for sigmoid volvulus. 134 64

Intestinal occlusion is a rare pathologic event during pregnancy occurring mostly in the second and third trimenon when increased volume of the uterus and the consequent displacement of abdominal organs cause complications of pathologies which would otherwise escape notice, such as intestinal adhesions, to become manifest. Diagnosis is difficult for a number of reasons. Vomiting during the first trimenon and mild abdominal pain during the third are often neglected or considered to be part of the normal course of pregnancy; pain is sometimes referred to atypical sites due to the displacement of abdominal organs; in other cases, the high endorphin tonus is apt to reduce the customary defence reaction. All this should not cause time to be lost, and whenever intestinal occlusion is suspected all the necessary diagnostic procedures must at once be carried out and appropriate therapy must speedily be started so as to reduce the risk of mortality and morbidity for mother and fetus. Management of ileus in pregnancy is identical to that for the non pregnant woman, except for the need to empty the uterus in cases in which it prevents treatment or if the fetus has reached a sufficient degree of pulmonary maturity. The paper describes a case of ileal volvulus and revisits the literature analyzing the diagnostic and therapeutic options suggested.
...
PMID:[Intestinal volvulus in pregnancy]. 149 64

A 50-year-old woman with a typical history of chronic idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstruction was admitted to hospital because of an acute episode of abdominal cramps, nausea, and vomiting. The diagnosis of chronic idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstruction had been established in this patient who had malnutrition and extreme weight loss as a result of severe malabsorption syndrome. The abdominal roentgenogram showed a typical hypotonic intestine with an enlarged stomach and distended intestinal loops with the radiological signs of an ileus. In addition to former episodes, there was also a transient aerobilia. The patient had not undergone biliary surgery or endoscopic sphincterotomy. To investigate the cause of the findings, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography and endoscopic manometry of the sphincter of Oddi were performed. The endoscopy showed the stomach and duodenum with a wide and dilated lumen and no spontaneous motility. Endoscopic manometry of the biliary tract and the sphincter of Oddi showed several abnormalities compared with a group of normal volunteers or patients who were examined via biliary manometry for other reasons. There was a low basal pressure (3.5 mm Hg) in the sphincter of Oddi together with low-amplitude phasic contractions (25-30 mm Hg), but the contraction frequency was in the normal range. Further investigations of the motility of the gastrointestinal tract in this patient showed diffuse esophageal spasms and a markedly delayed gastric emptying. The findings of biliary manometry in this patient suggest involvement of the sphincter of Oddi and the biliary system in chronic idiopathic pseudo-obstruction.
...
PMID:Aerobilia and hypomotility of the sphincter of Oddi in a patient with chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. 129 27

The application of oral hyperosmolar contrast media, as they are used for the control of anastomoses after operations on the upper intestinal tract and for the diagnosis of ileus, is still controversial today because of possible side effects. We examined 53 patients postoperatively, after abdominal operations and within the framework of the diagnosis of ileus, to find out whether there were any problems with the fluid and electrolyte balance, and whether side-effects such as nausea, vomiting, pain and diarrhoea were still tolerable. The patients did not classify their subjective complaints as very serious. None of our patients showed clinically manifest disorders of the fluid and electrolyte balance. The increased frequency of bowel movement, caused by the contrast agent, was required for the treatment of postoperative bowel atonia and the condition of ileus or sub-ileus, if present. We still think the application of hyperosmolar contrast media can be justified, and hence we restrict the use of the much more expensive iso-osmolar contrast agents to patients who are at risk in respect to aspiration and unfit to cooperate.
...
PMID:[Is the use of hyperosmolar oral contrast media still justifiable today?]. 157 78


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>