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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case report of mesenteric venous thrombosis with small bowel infarction in a 38-year-old woman who had been taking oral contraceptives is reported. The patient was admitted complaining of severe abdominal pain and
vomiting
for 36 hours. On admission, temperature was 37.5 degrees C and pulse 120/minute. Abdominal rigidity and left-sided abdominal tenderness were present. X-ray of the abdomen showed 2 distended loops of small bowel and 3 fluid levels. Serum amylase was normal. White cell count was 10,000/cu mm. There was a history of abdominal pain and diarrhea over a period of several years. For 6 months she had been taking Ovulen (mestranol .1 mg and ethynodiol diacetate .5 mg) for menstrual irregularity. 2 weeks earlier she had suffered an influenzalike illness with pleuristic chest pain,
loin pain
, urinary frequency, and dysuria. Chest X-ray and intravenous pylography were then reported as normal. At immediate operation, a 15 cm segment of ileum was found to be infarcted. Semipurulent fluid was present in the abdomen and areas of fibrinous peritonitis were observed. The involved segment of ileum was resected. A small thrombus was extracted from a mesenteric vein. Initial postoperative course was good but 3 days after operation chest pain, dyspnea, and giddiness developed and cardiac arrest followed. Resuscitation was successful. Pulmonary angiography then showed thrombi in all branches of the pulmonary artery. After heparin therapy symptoms improved and the patient left the hospital in 2 weeks, her condition being stabilized with warfarin and dipyridamole (Persantin). The diagnosis was confirmed by histological examination. Early recanalization of a mesenteric vein was noted. Other reported cases have shown an average prodromal phase of 4 or 5 days. The long-term diarrhea was considered as not connected with the present illness but the presumed influenza illness 2 weeks earlier may have been due to a pulmonary embolism. Of reported cases, 5 of 13 have died. Early diagnosis, prompt surgery, and heparin therpay are considered important.
...
PMID:Mesenteric venous thrombosis associated with oral contraceptives: a case report. 106 70
This report is a 17-year-old man with an acute renal failure who complained of nausea,
vomiting
, bilateral
loin pain
and abdominal pain after scuffle. Renal biopsy specimen obtained from the left kidney revealed acute tubular necrosis. After recovering renal function he showed extreme hypouricemia (serum uric acid, 0.6 mg/dl) and elevated uric acid clearance (62-78 ml/min). The fractional excretion of uric acid (CUA/Ccr) could not be influenced by either oral pyrazinamide or probenecid. As no other renal tubular or metabolic abnormalities were detected, it is suggested that presecretory reabsorption defect or subtotal defect in uric acid transportation was responsible for the hypouricemia in this patient.
...
PMID:[A case of acute renal failure in a patient with idiopathic hypouricemia]. 147 25
We report two cases of acute renal failure that followed the ingestion of jering. Features of jering poisoning included clinical presentation of bilateral
loin pain
, fever, nausea,
vomiting
, oligo-anuria, haematuria and passage of sandy particles in the urine. Blood urea (40.8 mmol/l; 21.9 mmol/l) and serum creatinine (1249 mumols/l; 693 mumols/l) were markedly elevated. With conservative therapy which included rehydration with normal saline and alkalinisation of the urine with sodium bicarbonate, the acute renal failure resolved.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure following jering ingestion. 204 77
A group of children (112) at different phase of development, i.e. neonates, infants, preschool and school children were studied for symptomatic UTI. The most common clinical presentations were
loin pain
(56.4%), fever (50.0%), diarrhea and
vomiting
(47.4%) in school, preschool and infant groups respectively. In the neonatal group all patients presented with sepsis. In school children fever was more common in those with radiological abnormalities vs those without (p less than 0.005). In neonates intrauterine growth retardation was more common in those with radiological abnormalities (p less than 0.012). Radiological abnormalities were more common in male school children than in female (p less than 0.02). Renal scarring occurred mainly in school children whereas VUR occurred mainly in infants. As male children advance in age there is increased risk of radiological abnormalities. There is an increased percentage of E. coli as causative organism as age increases; from 48.3% in neonates to 74.5% in school children. We conclude that symptomatic UTI is age related in many aspect.
...
PMID:Symptomatic urinary tract infection in pediatric patients--a developmental aspect. 391 42
This report describes a patient with acute renal failure that resulted from the ingestion of djenkol beans. Features of acute djenkolism include nausea,
vomiting
, bilateral
loin pain
, gross hematuria, and oliguria. The blood urea level was 16.2 mmol/L and the serum creatinine was 460 mumol/L. Phase contrast microscopy of the urinary sediment indicated that the hematuria was nonglomerular. Ultrasound of the kidneys showed slightly enlarged kidneys with no features of obstruction. Renal biopsy showed acute tubular necrosis similar to the single animal study reported in the literature. With conservative therapy, which included rehydration with normal saline and alkalinization of the urine with sodium bicarbonate, the acute renal failure resolved. Based on its chemistry, djenkol bean-associated acute renal failure may be analogous to acute uric acid nephropathy.
...
PMID:Djenkol bean poisoning (djenkolism): an unusual cause of acute renal failure. 781 May 35
Acute interstitial nephritis with severe acute renal failure is reported following tetracycline treatment in a 22-year-old male medical student. Acute renal failure developed within 48 h of a single repeated tetracycline dose and presented 2 days after taking the drug when there was oliguria, nausea,
vomiting
and bilateral
loin pain
without rash and fever. The serum creatinine concentration was 8.6 mg/dl and blood urea nitrogen 84 mg/dl. Examination of the urinary sediment revealed 15-20 RBCs per high-power field, and occasional granular and hyaline casts. Percutaneous renal biopsy performed immediately after admission revealed acute interstitial nephritis with immune complexes along the tubular basement membrane and intact glomeruli and was consistent with type 2 interstitial nephritis. Within 4 days of commencement of steroid treatment and hemodialysis, the urine output started to increase with improvement in serum creatinine and BUN levels and after 2 weeks of therapy hemodialysis was discontinued. He remains well 1 year following his illness with complete normalization of his renal function. Although a number of renal side effects of tetracycline antibiotics have been reported, acute interstitial nephritis is rarely caused by tetracycline treatment having been reported just twice following systemic use of minocycline.
...
PMID:Tetracycline-induced acute interstitial nephritis as a cause of acute renal failure. 988 23
The object of the case report is to present a case of spontaneous rupture of the renal pelvis with no underlying pathological condition to account for the rupture, a very rare and unusual occurrence. The patient was a 46-year-old Korean who presented with severe left
loin pain
and
vomiting
. The diagnosis was suspected on intravenous urography and confirmed by CT. Treatment was by ureteral stenting. The patient made a complete recovery. The differential diagnosis of this condition is discussed and the literature is reviewed.
...
PMID:Spontaneous rupture of the renal pelvis. 1076 Dec 75
Acute renal failure (ARF) is a rare presentation of IgA nephropathy (IgAN). It can be associated with the episodes of macroscopic haematuria, being then usually reversible, or it develops in the course of progressive glomerulopathy with extracapillary proliferation. In the first case ARF is attributed to tubular obstruction by red blood cell casts. We present the case of a 16-year-old boy with non-oliguric ARF in the course of IgAN. He was admitted to the urology unit with 4-day history of gross haematuria, severe
loin pain
, fever and
vomiting
. A year before admission he had a short episode of macrohaematuria without any other accompanying symptoms. His family history was not relevant. As the patient was suspected to have acute renal colic in the course of nephrolithiasis, intravenous urography was performed. Since no urinary tract visualisation was obtained, laboratory investigation was carried out revealing marked renal dysfunction with serum creatinine level of 743.3 mumol/l and serum urea of 49.3 mmol/l. The patient was transferred to our department, where conservative treatment was administered (dialysis was not instituted). A rapid improvement in renal function was observed; it returned to normal within 2 weeks. The biopsy findings were consistent with IgAN.
...
PMID:[Acute renal failure in the course of IgA nephropathy in a 16-year-old boy]. 1286 97
An 8-year-old boy, known with a Diamond-Blackfan anaemia, was admitted to the hospital because of frequent
vomiting
since 3 days and
loin pain
. In previous years, he had been admitted several times for the same complaints but no cause had been identified. Ultrasound examination of the abdomen performed at admittance showed dilatation of the left renal pelvis. A renal scintigraphy was discussed with the mother, and she refused the injection of furosemide, because her son was allegedly allergic to furosemide: previous furosemide treatments during blood transfusions for his anaemia had always resulted in stomach-ache and
vomiting
, which may be attributed, however, to an acute dilatation of the renal pelvis due to the diuretic effect of furosemide. Scintigraphy without furosemide showed a significant obstruction and asymmetric renal function, so a pyeloplasty was performed after which he has been symptom-free. In patients with cyclic
vomiting
, an intermittent uretero-pelvic junction obstruction should be considered and can only be ruled out when ultrasound during the complaints and renal scintigraphy under adequate hydration and after furosemide are normal.
...
PMID:[A boy with cyclic vomiting and an alleged furosemide allergy on the basis of a subpelvic stenosis]. 1833 43
The clinical presentation of acute onset of nausea,
vomiting
, and flank pain in combination with acute elevation of blood pressure should raise high suspicion of renal infarction. However, because of its nonspecific presentation, diagnosis may be delayed. We report the case of a 63-year-old man who presented with a 2-day history of right flank pain that was treated initially as a renal stone. He had a background history of atrial fibrillation. Further investigations confirmed this as a case of renal infarction. Renal infarction is underdiagnosed because of the similarity of its presentation to other renal pathology. Renal infarction should be considered in the differential diagnosis of
loin pain
, particularly in a patient with atrial fibrillation.
...
PMID:Considerations in the diagnosis and therapy for acute loin pain. 1937 55
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