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Query: UMLS:C0085693 (acute appendicitis)
3,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Right-sided colonic diverticulitis is an uncommon but clinically significant condition as it closely mimics other common acute right-sided abdominal conditions like acute appendicitis and cholecystitis. CT can provide a rapid and accurate diagnosis of this condition and thereby prevent unnecessary laparotomy and surgical procedures since it is essentially a benign self-limiting condition requiring medical treatment. It is the aim of this pictorial essay to describe the CT findings and increase awareness among radiologists of this condition.
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PMID:Right-sided colonic diverticulitis: CT findings. 1180 8

Torsions are rare acute abdominal conditions and are mistaken for other more frequent diseases. The present work draws attention to the most frequent diagnostic errors. The authors present three cases of torsions of intraabdominal organs and two cases of testicular torsion. All patients attended their doctor because of abdominal pain. In four of five cases the patients were first treated for an erroneous diagnosis of acute abdomen. In the first case the torsion of the omentum was mistaken for diverticulitis of the sigmoid, later for an intraperitoneal lipoma, in he second case for cholecystitis, in the third case a patient with torsion of a myoma was indicated for surgery on account of acute appendicitis. In the fourth case incomplete torsion of the testis was mistaken for irritation of the appendix. In the fifth case where abdominal symptomatology dominated the correct diagnosis of testicular torsion was made and atypically spontaneous detorsion of the testis occurred.
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PMID:[Organ torsion and abdominal symptoms--case reports]. 1188 Dec 84

A rare event of acute free perforation of gall bladder with biliary peritonitis in a case of calculous cholecystitis in a 28 years old pregnant lady occurring in the absence of the usual factors associated with gall stone disease is reported. The clinical features resembled acute appendicitis and a pre-operative diagnosis could not be made. It is suggested that a thorough attempt should be made to exclude conditions mimicking appendicitis, including those of the biliary system, on finding a normal appendix at emergency appendicectomy without hesitating to convert to full laparotomy if required.
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PMID:Gall bladder perforation and biliary peritonitis in a young pregnant lady. 1202 12

We made a study in 1st Surgery Clinic of Iassy between March 93--November 98, with 2246 laparoscopic cholecystectomies. The reason was to define the place and role of laparoscopy in non-lithiasis cholecystopathies (81 cases). In the same period were operated classically 888 calculous cholecystitis and 38 non-lithiasis cholecystitis. The laparoscopy has a major role in diagnosis to the patients with many abdominal symptoms. We discovered pericholecystic adherences, hepatic cirrhosis, acute appendicitis, etc. Sometimes, the laparoscopy was made for "second look" after surgical treatment for neoplasia, the metastasis diagnosis, for tumors visible echographically. In many situations the laparoscopic cholecystectomy may be considered like a preventive operation. The easy postoperative evolution is an argument to enlarge the indication for laparoscopic cholecystectomy in alithiasis cholecystitis.
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PMID:[Laparoscopic cholecystectomy in non-lithiasis cholecystopathies]. 1208 69

A case of acute abdomen caused by a Brucella melitensis is reported. The patient presented with biliary involvement in the form of acute acalculous cholecystitis and developed acute appendicitis that resulted in his surgical treatment.
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PMID:Acute abdomen due to Brucella melitensis. 1275 20

Sickle cell disease is characterized by chronic hemolytic anemia and vaso-occlusive painful crisis. The vascular occlusion in sickle cell disease is a complex process and accounts for the majority of the clinical manifestations of the disease. Abdominal pain is an important component of vaso-occlusive painful crisis and may mimic diseases such as acute appendicitis and cholecystitis. Acute pancreatitis is rarely included as a cause of abdominal pain in patients with sickle cell disease. When it occurs it may result form biliary obstruction, but in other instances it might be a consequence of microvessel occlusion causing ischemia. In this series we describe four cases of acute pancreatitis in patients with sickle cell disease apparently due to microvascular occlusion and ischemic injury to the pancreas. All patients responded to conservative management. Acute pancreatitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of abdominal pain in patients with sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis during sickle cell vaso-occlusive painful crisis. 1282 57

We reviewed the medical records of 62 patients with systemic small and medium-sized vessel vasculitides and gastrointestinal tract involvement followed at our institution between 1981 and 2002. This group included 46 men and 16 women (male:female ratio, 2.9), with a mean age of 48 +/- 18 years. Vasculitides were distributed as follows: 38 polyarteritis nodosa (21 related to hepatitis B virus), 11 Churg-Strauss syndrome, 6 Wegener granulomatosis, 4 microscopic polyangiitis, and 3 rheumatoid arthritis-associated vasculitis. Gastrointestinal manifestations were present at or occurred within 3 months of diagnosis in 50 (81%) patients and were mainly abdominal pain in 61 (97%), nausea or vomiting in 21 (34%), diarrhea in 17 (27%), hematochezia or melena in 10 (16%), and hematemesis in 4 (6%). Gastroduodenal ulcerations were detected endoscopically in 17 (27 %) patients, esophageal in 7 (11%), and colorectal in 6 (10%), but histologic signs of vasculitis were found in only 3 colon biopsies. Twenty-one (34%) patients had a surgical abdomen; 11 (18%) developed peritonitis, 9 (15%) had bowel perforations, 10 (16%) bowel ischemia/infarction, 4 (6%) intestinal occlusion, 6 (10%) acute appendicitis, 5 (8%) cholecystitis, and 3 (5%) acute pancreatitis. (Some patients had more than 1 condition.) Sixteen (26%) patients died.The respective 10-month and 5-year survival rates were 71% (95% confidence interval [CI], 52-90) and 56% (95% CI, 35-77) for the 21 surgical patients; and 94% (95% CI, 87-101) and 82% (95% CI, 70-94) for the 41 patients without surgical abdomen (p = 0.08). Peritonitis (hazard ratio [HR] = 4.3, p < 0.01), bowel perforations (HR = 5.7, p < 0.01), gastrointestinal ischemia or infarctions (HR = 4.1, p < 0.01), and intestinal occlusion (HR = 5.5, p < 0.01) were the only gastrointestinal manifestations significantly associated with increased mortality in multivariate analysis. For this subgroup of 15 patients, 6-month and 5-year survival rates were 60% (95% CI, 35-85) and 46% (95% CI, 19-73), respectively (p = 0.003). None of the other gastrointestinal or extraintestinal vasculitis-related symptoms, or angiographic abnormalities (seen in 67% of the 39 patients who underwent angiography), was predictive of surgical complications or poor outcome. However, prognosis has dramatically improved during the past 30 years, probably owing to better management of these more severely ill patients, with prompt surgical intervention when indicated, and the combined use of steroids and immunosuppressants.
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PMID:Presentation and outcome of gastrointestinal involvement in systemic necrotizing vasculitides: analysis of 62 patients with polyarteritis nodosa, microscopic polyangiitis, Wegener granulomatosis, Churg-Strauss syndrome, or rheumatoid arthritis-associated vasculitis. 1575 41

Today sonography is the first line imaging method for diagnosing acute appendicitis. Experienced investigators will have an accuracy of more than 90%. Sonography can diagnose many conservatively managed diseases. The most important differential diagnoses are infectious ileocoecitis, right sided diverticulitis, appendagitis, adnexitis, ruptured or torque ovarian cysts, ectopic pregnancies. Ureterolithiasis, cholecystitis, haematomas in the psoas muscle or in the rectus muscle are rarer causes of right lower quadrant pain. Sonography can reduce the high rate of false positive clinical examinations concerning acute appendicitis. It has to be stated that an exclusion of appendicitis can only be made sonographically if the normal appendix can be seen in its full length and/or an other differential diagnosis can be depicted that explains the clinical symptoms. Mucoceles are rare cystoid lesions of the appendix. They exhibit a typical onion skin sign structure caused by different mucus viscosities. In large mucoceles a tumor causes this lesion.
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PMID:[Sonography of acute appencitis and the main differential diagnoses]. 1668 Nov 56

Among 328 patients with dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome (DHF/DSS), 14 (4 men and 10 women, median age 44 years) had acute abdomen. DHF/DSS was initially suspected in only 2 of these 14 patients. Presumptive diagnoses of acute cholecystitis (6 acalculus and 4 calculus cholecystitis) were made in 10 patients, non-specific peritonitis in three patients, and acute appendicitis in one patients. Cholecystectomy, percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage, and appendectomy were performed in three patients. Transfused blood in the three patients who underwent invasive procedures and the 11 patients who received supportive treatment included packed red blood cells (24 versus 0 units; P = 0.048), fresh frozen plasma (84 versus 0 units; P = 0.048), and platelets (192 versus 180 units; P = 0.003). Patients who underwent invasive procedures also had prolonged time in the hospital (median = 11 versus 7 days; P = 0.015). To avoid unnecessary invasive procedure-related morbidity and mortality, this report underscores the importance of a careful differential diagnosis in patients with acute abdomen in a dengue-endemic setting.
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PMID:Dengue hemorrhagic fever patients with acute abdomen: clinical experience of 14 cases. 1668 99

Results of treatment of 116 patients with acute appendicitis, cholecystitis pancreatitis and other inflammatory diseases of the abdominal cavity, complicated with peritonitis in 53 cases, are analyzed. The concentrations of interleukine-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor small be, Cyrillic (TNF-6) and its soluble receptor in peripheral blood were used as systemic inflammatory response indicators. The increase of IL-6 and soluble TNF-6 receptor concentrations correlated with the augmentation of inflammatory response. The Willebrand factor with plasma activity of 180-200% can be used as an early indicator of inflammatory response in patients with acute abdominal diseases. The higher activity of the Willebrand factor is associated with multiple organ failure syndrome.
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PMID:[Laboratory criteria of systemic inflammatory syndrome by surgical abdominal infections]. 1949 67


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