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

The application of a body cast or the surgical correction of scoliosis is occasionally associated with acute obstructive vascular compression of the duodenum. The clinical and radiological manifestations observed in 10 such patients are described. All cases manifested abdominal distension and vomiting, while epigastric pain was present in 50%. Plain radiographs of the abdomen demonstrated duodenal distension with little gas in the remainder of the bowel in three cases. Barium studies in nine patients demonstrated an intact mucosal pattern and a duodenum dilated proximal to the site where the superior mesenteric vessels crossed it. All cases recovered with non-operative treatment which included nasogastric suction, intravenous fluids, change in position, particularly nursing in the prone position, and, occasionally, cast removal. The obstruction may sometimes persist or recur and then duodenojejunal side-to-side anastomosis is the surgical procedure of choice. The term "cast syndrome" is a misnomer as vascular compression of the duodenum may also occur in patients who are undergoing treatment for scoliosis without the use of a body cast.
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PMID:Radiological features of vascular compression of the duodenum occurring as a complication of the treatment of scoliosis (the cast syndrome). 62 5

Eighteen patients with dyspepsia and vomiting which followed surgery for peptic ulcer have completed a study to examine the role of diverting bile from the stomach by a Roux-en-Y procedure. Bile regurgitation and mild epigastric pain relieved by vomiting were abolished. Measurements of bile acids in the fasting gastric aspirate were useful in predicting the outcome of surgery; good results were obtained when initially there was reflex into the stomach of more than 120 mumol/hour of bile acids. A wider group of patients than those selected in previous series may benefit from this operation, as good results can be obtained in patients with dyspepsia relieved by alkali and without achlorhydria or gastritis. Endoscopy was repeated one year after Roux-en-Y operation. Erythema of the mucosa was improved, but gastritis did not improve.
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PMID:Selection of patients for bile diversion surgery: use of bile acid measurement in fasting gastric aspirates. 63 35

Gastrointestinal metastases secondary to bronchogenic carcinoma are relatively uncommon and most are found incidentally at autopsy examination in patients with advanced or widely disseminated lung cancer. Occasionally gastrointestinal metastases occurr relatively early in the course of the disease and give rise to a variety of clinical symptoms and radiological abnormalities. Recognition of these abnormalities is important in order that appropriate palliative therapy may be undertaken. The clinical. radiological and pathological findings in 12 patients with symptomatic gastrointestinal metastases secondary to bronchogenic carcinoma were reviewed. Clinical symptoms varied according to the site of metastatic involvement and included dysphagia, epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting, gastrointestinal bleeding, anaemia and signs of intestinal obstruction or perforation. The sites of metastatic involvement were: oesphagogastric junction (2 cases); stomach (2 cases); duodenum (1 case): jejunum (3 cases); ileum (2 cases), colon (2 cases). The radiological findings are discussed and illustrated.
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PMID:Symptomatic gastrointestinal metastases secondary to bronchogenic carcinoma. 63 63

We observed 16 patients suffering from postoperative gastritis: 8 after a truncal vagotomy with pyloroplasty, 6 after a Billroth II type gastrectomy, 1 after a truncal vagotomy with a Billroth I type antrectomy, 1 after correction of a hiatal hernia with pyloroplasty. Symptoms appeared from 1 month to 16 years after surgery. They consisted in epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting, weight loss. The diagnosis is established essentially on the clinical picture and the endoscopy, which shows the presence of bile in the stomach and hyperemia of the mucosa. Microscopic lesions are constant, but there is no histologic specificity. 12 of 16 patients were operated on (Roux-enY loop). The reflux was suppressed in each case. Results of the operation were excellent or good in 10 patients, fair in one and unsatisfactory in one.
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PMID:[Postoperative gastritis caused by reflux. Apropos of 16 cases]. 65 39

Prolapse of the gastric mucosa into the duodenum must be considered when a round soft tissue mass is seen in the right upper quadrant on scout abdominal film. Gastric prolapse may mimic tumor in the duodenum when the prolapse is large. Examination with barium meal is necessary to exclude prolapse of the gastric mucosa into the duodenum as a cause of epigastric pain and vomiting. Medical treatment is suggested for patients with mild symptoms, but patients with severe symptoms, repeated hemorrhage, anemia, severe intermittent epigastric pain and vomiting due to ball-valve syndrome should have operation.
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PMID:Duodenal pseudotumor with ball-valve syndrome. 72 37

The causes of postgastrectomy syndrome are multiple and differ in their relative frequency. Among the more unusual is intussusception of the small bowel into the stomach or into the jejunojejunostomy. We describe a patient with acute retrograde intussusception of the efferent loop into the jejunojejunostomy occurring 14 months after partial gastrectomy with Billroth II anastomosis. Several theories regarding etiology are mentioned, among them functional causes, mechanical causes and derangements in stomal function. In our case, the circulatory derangement might possibly be a causal factor. The diagnostic problems are discussed, and the importance of early diagnosis is pointed out. A chronic form of intussusception is mentioned by several authors. Often the differential diagnosis is difficult, but epigastric pain, vomiting--ultimately of blood--and a palpable mass, constitute a classic triad. X-ray and endoscopy are supplementary aids to the diagnosis. Several types of operative treatment have been used, but no operative procedure seems to be fully effective as a safeguard against recurrence.
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PMID:Intussusception as a complication of partial gastrectomy. A case report. 73 79

1. The syndrome of reflux gastritis is produced by the actions of bile and upper intestinal and pancreatic secretions alone or in combination on an altered gastric mucosa. 2. The triad of epigastric pain unrelieved by antacids, bilious vomiting, and weight loss, particularly after a gastric operation should make one suspect this syndrome. Anemia due to loss of blood and dysphagia occur less frequently. 3. The definitive diagnosis is made by endoscopy. Barium studies are of less value. Acid secretory studies are not diagnostic and are of academic interest. 4. Medical treatment utilizes antacids and cholestyramine alone or together. Good, long-lasting results with these are infrequent. Despite these results, medical treatment should be tried first. 5. Surgical treatment consists of diversion of the biliary and upper intestinal secretions from the stomach and doing a vagotomy with or without a distal gastric resection to prevent a marginal ulcer from developing. 6. The two most popular operations are a Roux-en-Y diversion or interposed peristaltic jejunal limb. The simplicity of the former has made this more popular with most American surgeons. 7. The results of surgery are good to excellent in 75 to 95 per cent of cases. Relief of symptoms, improvement in histologic and secretory studies, and weight gain should be anticipated. 8. Less than optimal results are reported when the surgical diversion has not been total, gastric stasis persists, or other postgastrectomy sequelae accompany reflux gastritis.
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PMID:Postoperative alkaline reflux gastritis. 79 63

Postoperative alkaline reflux gastritis is a distinct clinical entity occuring after operations enlarging, bypassing or resecting the pylorus. Reflux of alkaline duodenal content into the stomach is the causative factor. Primarily bile acids have an aggressive effect and lead to a destruction of the gastric mucosal barrier. Epigastric pain, fullness after meals and bile vomiting are the main symptoms. Gastroscopy with biopsy reveals a severe chronic atrophic gastritis and bile reflux. In most cases an achlorhydria that can be histamin-resistant is present. For adequate treatment surgical procedures diverting the bile flow from the stomach should be performed.
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PMID:[Postoperative alkaline reflux gastritis (author's transl)]. 83 29

Common and uncommon diseases whose symptom picture includes signs that may lead to an incorrect diagnosis are examined. Questions of this kind are obviously important in both medicine and emergency surgery, since incorrect diagnosis may involve either delay in the commencement of suitable treatment or the taking of what may even be dangerous therapeutic measures. Instances of heart and lung disease frequetly marked by abdominal symptomatologies are presented: bronchopulmonitis of various aetiologies, myocardial infarct, rhythm disturbances. In addition to the more atypical signs, such as epigastric pain in infarct and right hypochondriac pain in right basal bronchopulmonitis, manifestations such as vomiting, diarrhoea, diffuse abdominal pains and intestinal occlusion must be borne in mnd in establishing the correct diagnosis.
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PMID:[Thoracic diseases with predominant abdominal symptomatology]. 95 Oct 41

A female with premary hyperparathyroidism and secondary renal lesions, as well as lesions of the stomach and pancreas is described. The initial illness was manifested by repeated renal crises. Later, gastroenterological complaints appeared--epigastralgia, vomiting, frequent hematemesis with melena. That was the cause for a gastric resection, diffuse erosive gastritis being found. After the operation, the pains and the vomiting of hematin matter repeatedly recidivated. Clinically and at the laboratory, data were formed for a chronic recidivating pancreatitis with the presence of primary hyperparathyroidism. The postoperative treatment of the parathyroid adenoma led to an improvement of the gastroenterological complaints.
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PMID:[Chronic recurrent pancreatitis with erosive gastritis in a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism]. 101 31


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