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

The records of 22 children (sex rate boy/girl 1.75, mean age 2 7/12 year) treated for intussusception in Randers Central Hospital during the period 1975-1989 were reviewed. In 27% of the cases this diagnosis was made before admission, gastroenteritis being the most frequent differential diagnosis (18%). The mean duration of symptoms before admission was 24 hours. No significant correlation between low age and late diagnosis was found. Symptoms were vomiting (100%), abdominal colic (95%), palpable abdominal tumour (73%), diarrhoea with blood and mucus (63%) and low-grade fever (64%). Treatment by barium enema had a low success-rate (29%); the best results were recorded in children with symptoms for less than 24 hours. The mean duration of the hospital stay was 3.5 days in children treated by barium reduction and 8.5 days in children treated surgically. Early diagnosis seems to increase the success-rate of non-operative treatment. Absence of the classical triad of paroxysmal pain, abdominal mass and red currant jelly stool (found in 41% of the cases) does not exclude the possibility of intussusception.
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PMID:[Intussusception in children]. 204 44

The results are presented of an investigation by barium swallow of 271 younger siblings of children with hiatal hernia (HH). The incidence of HH among younger siblings with a history of repeated vomiting and regurgitation was 41% and in those without symptoms was 4.3%.
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PMID:Findings on barium swallow in younger siblings of children with hiatal hernia (partial thoracic stomach). 205 Dec 68

Superior mesenteric artery syndrome is a condition in which the third portion of the duodenum is intermittently compressed by the overlying superior mesenteric artery, resulting in gastrointestinal obstruction. Predisposing factors include rapid weight loss, prolonged supine positioning, and using a spinal orthosis, all of which are common among acute traumatic quadriplegic patients. This paper presents three patients, aged 24, 16, and 20 years, with traumatic quadriplegia treated with supine positioning and cervical orthoses, who had postprandial nausea and emesis, bloating, and abdominal pain during rehabilitation. Upper gastrointestinal radiographic series demonstrated abrupt duodenal obstruction to barium flow in all three patients. Two of the patients had complete relief of symptoms with conservative management, and one required surgical duodenojejunostomy. Enhanced awareness of this condition may result in improved recognition of this disease as a cause of persistent, unexplained gastrointestinal disturbances in quadriplegic persons, thereby optimizing its treatment and reducing its potential morbidity.
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PMID:Superior mesenteric artery syndrome in acute traumatic quadriplegia: case reports and literature review. 205 11

A prospective study of abdominal ultrasound was undertaken in 100 consecutive infants who presented with a history of persistent vomiting aged 5 to 90 days. Each infant had a 'test feed' followed by an ultrasonographic scan of the pylorus at the cotside. On test feeding a palpable tumour was evident in 38 infants. On real time ultrasound using the criteria for diagnosing pyloric stenosis, these 38 infants as well as six others were documented as having pyloric stenosis. In the other 56 patients the vomiting settled in six and a barium examination was performed on the remaining 50. This confirmed gastro-oesophageal reflux in 46, two of whom had an associated hiatus hernia, one with a duodenal malrotation, and three were reported as normal. Ultrasound of the abdomen is an accurate, reliable, and rapid screening method to differentiate the causes of severe vomiting in infancy.
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PMID:Value of ultrasound in differentiating causes of persistent vomiting in infants. 206 Aug 69

A retrospective study had been conducted on hospitalized infants and children in the Pediatric ward of Dr. Pirngadi Hospital, Medan from January 1, 1987 through December 31, 1988. The purpose is to assess the incidence and clinical manifestations of intussusception. During the same period, there were 6484 infants and children hospitalized, 39 (0.6%) with intussusception, consisting of 23 (58.9%) males and (41.1%) females. Most of the cases (53.85%) were in age group of 4-6 months. Thirty four patients (87.12%) were wellnourished, and 5 patients (12.82%) undernourished. The major symptoms of intussusception were bloody diarrhoea (87.17%), vomiting (82.05%) and abdominal distention (66.41%). Successful reposition with barium enema occurred in 1 (20%) out of 5 patients. The major symptoms of intussusception were bloody diarrhoea (87.17%), vomiting. Surgical intervention was performed in 22 patients (56.41%). The result was as follows: discharged in good condition in 15 (68.18%) and deaths occurred in the remaining cases (7 cases = 31.82%). Of those 7 cases who died after operation, 2 cases were hospitalized in less than 2 days, 3 cases in less than 3 days and the remaining 2 cases in more than 3 days, after the symptoms developed.
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PMID:Intussusception at the pediatric ward of Dr. Pirngadi Hospital, Medan. 207 13

We report herein a case of an 82 year old Japanese woman admitted to hospital after suddenly experiencing upper abdominal pain and vomiting. An upper gastrointestinal series showed a narrow segment with edematous adjacent loops in the proximal jejunum. On the twentieth day following her admission, a barium-meal radiograph revealed that the narrow segment had progressed to a firm tubular stenosis with effacement of the mucosal pattern. The stenotic segment, resected the following day, was 7 cm long with an internal circumference of only 0.5 cm at its narrowest portion. Histologic examination of the resected specimen showed ulceration and marked edema in the intestinal wall, accompanied by organizing and recanalizing thrombi in the subserosal arteries. These features were strongly suggestive of an ischemic process.
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PMID:Ischemic stricture of the jejunum--report of a case. 208 98

A 4 month old girl with oesophageal achalasia was successfully treated with a single pneumatic dilatation. A subsequent barium swallow showed almost normal oesophageal caliber. During the following eighteen months, vomiting and feeding problems did not recur.
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PMID:Infantile achalasia treated by pneumatic dilatation. 213 54

Spontaneous intramural hematoma of the esophagus (SIHE) is a rare condition usually affecting middle-aged or elderly women. It presents as acute substernal or epigastric pain, typically accompanied by dysphagia or hematemesis. SIHE is not usually associated with vomiting, and is therefore clearly distinguishable from hematogenic esophageal disorders, such as the Mallory Weiss lesion and the Boerhaave syndrome. The pathogenesis is in dispute. We present a case of SIHE without a discernible mucosal breach, suggesting a primary intramural bleed as the initiating event. Its diagnosis relies on the history and a barium swallow. Instrumentation can result in further damage to the esophagus. Treatment is conservative and results in resolution of the hematoma and return to normal swallowing. A favorable prognosis is the rule.
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PMID:[A submucosal hematoma of the esophagus. A clinical case]. 215 54

Although it is common in the adult population, sigmoid volvulus is unusual in childhood. We report the cases of four children treated for sigmoid volvulus, and we review an additional 44 cases. The mean age of occurrence was 8 years. Predisposing factors were present in 33%. Abdominal pain (66%), vomiting (31%), and obstipation (10%) were the most common symptoms. Abdominal findings included distention (69%), tenderness (41%), and a mass (10%). The classic roentgenographic omega sign of volvulus was present on plain films in only 29% of the cases. Barium enema examination was diagnostic in 61% of the cases in which it was used. Nonoperative treatment by barium enema or proctoscopy was successful in all 17 cases in which it was attempted. The recurrence rate after nonoperative treatment was 31%. Thirty children had operation. The mortality in the group of patients having "derotation" alone was 29%. Immediate resection was associated with a 25% mortality; none of the patients who had elective resection died. Sigmoid resection is the definitive treatment for children as well as adults, but nonoperative decompression to allow for elective resection should be attempted in patients who have no evidence of peritonitis.
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PMID:Sigmoid volvulus in childhood. 219 90

We report a rare tumor of the nasopharynx in the neonate: the teratoid or hairy polyp. In addition to the traditional modes of evaluation (barium swallow, plain radiography, and indirect laryngoscopy), CT and magnetic resonance were used to assess this unusual cause of respiratory distress and vomiting in a newborn.
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PMID:Neonatal nasopharyngeal hairy polyp: CT and MR appearance. 222 43


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