Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085693 (acute appendicitis)
3,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A thermographic study has revealed zones of hyperthermia in the epigastrium and other abdominal regions in 91.4 per cent of the patients with food poisoning. The temperature gradient in the epigastrium depended on the degree of severity of the disease (in mild course--0.60 +/- 0.11 degrees C, in moderately severe and severe course--1.15 +/- 0.09 degrees C). In salmonellosis a zone of hyperthermia was also found in the right iliac region. Clinical recovery in most cases preceded temperature normalization on the abdomen. In patients with acute dysentery the hyperthermic zone was constantly revealed in the left iliac region, in acute appendicitis in the right iliac region, in acute cholecystitis in the right hypochondrium, in acute pancreatitis in the epigastrium or in the hypochondrium with a clearly defined upper border. Thermography contributed to the differential diagnosis of food poisoning and the above diseases.
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PMID:[Thermographic semeiotics of food poisoning and its differential diagnosis]. 275 59

Uncomplicated amebic colitis is readily treated and has a mortality rate of less than 0.5%. Complications necessitating surgical intervention develop in only 6% to 11% of patients with symptomatic disease. However, the mortality rate in these patients ranges from 40% to 100% and stems in part from delays in diagnosis and treatment. Patients with known amebic colitis who show signs of systemic toxicity or of localized or generalized peritonitis are at high risk for complications; surgical consultation should be obtained. Patients who are thought to have acute appendicitis, diverticulitis, or obstructive or perforative carcinoma but have a history of dysentery atypical of that in these conditions should also be evaluated for amebiasis. Such patients should be treated presumptively until the diagnosis of amebic colitis can be excluded.
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PMID:Amebic colitis. Preventing morbidity and mortality from fulminant disease. 286 1

Results of 214 appendectomies in patients with acute intestinal diseases were analyzed. The clinical course and results of treatment of acute appendicitis against the background of salmonellosis and dysentery were discussed. It was shown that the theory of infectious nature of acute appendicitis is rightful and that valuable etiotropic therapy is necessary for prevention of chronicity of the intestinal infection.
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PMID:[Acute appendicitis in patients with salmonellosis and dysentery]. 961 23

Amoebiasis, a disease of worldwide distribution, is endemic in tropical countries with suboptimal sanitation facilities. Isolated amoebic appendicitis (IAA) is regarded as a rare manifestation of the disease globally. Because there are no defined clinical features that distinguish IAA from bacterial appendicitis, diagnosis is usually dependent on histopathological examination. A 9-year retrospective study was undertaken to investigate the clinicopathological aspects of IAA. The main complaints were fever and abdominal pain. None of the patients had dysentery. The pre-operative clinical diagnosis was acute appendicitis and acute abdomen in 13 and 8 patients, respectively. In all cases the intra-operative diagnosis was acute appendicitis. Gross pathological appraisal revealed peritonitis and perforation in 19 and 17 cases, respectively. Histopathological examination of these appendices demonstrated appendiceal ulceration, transmural mixed inflammation, haematophagous amoebic trophozoites and necrosis in all cases. Vascular pathology comprised venous and capillary luminal plugging (11 cases), necrotising small vessel vasculitis (11 cases), thrombophlebitis of medium sized veins (9 cases) and arteritis with associated thrombosis (1 case). Organising fibrinopurulent peritonitis was present in 19 cases. Two appendices that appeared normal macroscopically demonstrated ulceration and inflammation that were confined to the mucosa and submucosa. All of 18 patients who were treated with metronidazole survived without further surgery, while three patients who were untreated succumbed to the disease. Appendicectomy, accurate histopathological appraisal thereof and optimal, timely management of IAA were critical to the favourable outcome in the present study.
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PMID:Isolated amoebic appendicitis. 1211 Dec 2