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

Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infections in two bacteriologically confirmed cases are described. A child was found to have mesenteric adenitis and an adult had septicemia. Invariably simulating acute appendicitis, mesenteric adenitis most often occurs in male children and adolescents. Septicemia with this organism usually affects elderly, debilitated patients, who frequently have chronic hepatic disease. The infrequent diagnosis of infection with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis in the United States is probably due to failure to consider it a human pathogen. Currently classified with the Enterobacteriaceae, Yersinia pseudotuberculosis in a non-lactose-fermenting, Gram-negative coccobacillus. It is sensitive to a wide range of antibiotics, including tetracycline and streptomycin, but usually is resistant to ampicillin. Yersinia pseudotuberculosis has a worldwide distribution in wild and domestic mammals and birds. Infections in man may result from direct contact with infected animals or their excreta.
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PMID:Clinical and laboratory aspects of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infections, with a report of two cases. 77 44

The efficacy of imipenem-cilastatin was compared with that of tobramycin and metronidazole for the treatment of appendicitis-associated abdominal infections in children in an open, randomized trial. Two hundred eighteen patients between 2.5 and 16.8 years of age hospitalized for appendectomy because of suspected acute appendicitis were allocated to 5 treatment groups. The appendix was perforated in 54 (33.8%) of the 160 cases with appendicitis. All patients responded favorably to treatment. Infection in the wound occurred in 15 of 125 (12.0%) of those without preoperative antibiotic therapy and in 5 of 83 (6.0%) of those given imipenem preoperatively (P = 0.12; 95% confidence interval, -2.2 to 14.2%). C-reactive protein decreased significantly faster in those with perforated appendix treated with imipenem than in those treated with tobramycin and metronidazole (58.2 mg/liter vs. 89.4 mg/liter, P less than 0.05 on the third postoperative day). Imipenem-cilastatin was at least as effective and economically comparable as tobramycin and metronidazole for the treatment of appendicitis-associated infections in children.
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PMID:Imipenem-cilastatin vs. tobramycin and metronidazole for appendicitis-related infections. 160 80

Infection with Yersinia enterocolitica had been associated with acute appendicitis in approximately six per cent of patients in northern European countries. However, the incidence of Y. enterocolitica in patients with appendicitis in this country is uncertain. Therefore, this study was undertaken to ascertain whether Y. enterocolitica is a possible infectious agent in appendicitis in the southwestern United States. Fifty prospective patients (35 men and 15 women) with an average age of 22.3 years (range 3 to 62 years) underwent appendectomy for presumed appendicitis. Portions of each specimen were cultured for Y. enterocolitica with highly selective media (Cefsulodin-Irgasan-Novobiocin [CIN] agar). Pathologically, 44 of the patients had appendicitis and 6 patients had normal appendices. Four of the 44 patients (9.1%) with appendicitis were found to be culture positive for Y. enterocolitica, while it was recovered from none of the normal appendices. This indicates that Y. enterocolitica may represent the major pathogen in acute appendicitis in a small, but distinct, portion of indigent patients within Los Angeles County as it does elsewhere in the world.
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PMID:The role of Yersinia enterocolitica in appendicitis in the southwestern United States. 174 91

In nine patients with clinical symptoms of acute appendicitis, graded-compression ultrasound (US) did not depict the appendix but instead demonstrated mural thickening of the terminal ileum and part of the colon, as well as moderately enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes. In one patient a normal appendix was removed; eight patients recovered without treatment. Infection with Campylobacter jejuni was proved in all nine patients. In four patients, an unnecessary appendectomy was avoided because of the US findings. Graded-compression US enables differentiation between acute appendicitis and Campylobacter ileocolitis, a vital differentiation, since surgery is almost certainly not indicated for the latter.
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PMID:Campylobacter ileocolitis mimicking acute appendicitis: differentiation with graded-compression US. 327 42

In 352 patients who were hospitalized with symptoms of an acute appendicitis, Yersinia infection were determined in 18.2% of the cases by cultural and serological methods. Infections due to Y. enterocolitica (Y. e.) serovar 0:3 were approximately 6 times more frequent than those due to Y. e. serovar 0:9. Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (Y. pstbc.) could only be isolated in one patient from a mesenterial lymph node. In another case Yersinia serovar 0:6 could be isolated as well as Y. e. serovar 0:3. The majority of the infections were found in the age group 9-12 years. The incidence was highest in the summer months June-August.
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PMID:[Frequency and significance of infections due to Yersinia enterocolitica in "acute appendicitis" (author's transl)]. 703 57

A three year prospective randomised study was undertaken to study the efficacy of three regimens of antimicrobial drug combinations in reducing postoperative wound sepsis in acute appendicitis. Group A--Metronidazole and gentamicin; Group B--Metronidazole and ciprofloxacin; Group C--Metronidazole and cefotaxime. Randomization was done by drawing from a set of sealed envelopes. Antibiotics were started preoperatively once a presumptive diagnosis of appendicitis was made, provided there was no history of prior antibiotic usage. For simple appendicitis (normal or inflamed) two more doses were given postoperatively. For complicated appendicitis, duration of antibiotic treatment was four days postoperatively. All antibiotics were given intravenously to avoid variations in bioavailability. Wound was inspected daily till discharge and at 30 days post operatively or earlier if the patient had symptoms of wound infection. A total of 128 patients completed the study. Eighty nine were simple appendicitis while the rest were complicated. Twenty one developed wound infection. Out of 21, 13 occurred in group A, 5 in group B and 3 in group C. Individually, the difference in infection rates between group A and group C patients with simple appendicitis was statistically significant. Infection rates in all other groups were not statistically different. Cefotaxime and metronidazole combination had the lowest wound infection rate. Hence it is recommended for antibiotic prophylaxis.
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PMID:A trial of various regimens of antibiotics in acute appendicitis. 961 3

Acute appendicitis is uncommon after renal transplant. Infection with Candida albicans can produce serious complications by compromising the vascular anastomosis. In such cases, the origin of Candida albicans is often in the gastrointestinal system. Here, we report 2 uncommon complications that occurred in the same patient. A 27-year-old female renal transplant patient with appendicitis presented to our institution with acute graft failure. The patient was treated with an appendectomy and a transplant nephrectomy. Subsequently, the patient had a mycotic pseudoaneurysm rupture of the external iliac artery secondary to Candida albicans infection that originated possibly in the gastrointestinal system. This complication was further treated with a cross-femoral bypass. The occurrence of these 2 complications together is rare.
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PMID:Spontaneous mycotic external iliac artery aneurysm rupture after perforated acute appendicitis in a renal allograft recipient. 2164 72

Infections and their complications requiring surgical intervention are a frequent presentation in African children. Surgical site infection (SSI) is common with rates over 20%, even after clean procedures. The high rates of SSI are due in part to lack of infection control and surveillance policies in most hospitals in Africa. SSI is attended by complications, long hospital stay, and some mortality, but the economic consequences are unestimated. Typhoid fever and typhoid intestinal perforation are major problems with perforation rates of approximately 10%, which is higher in older children. The ideal surgical treatment is arguable, but simple closure and segmental resection are the present effective surgical options. Because of delayed presentation, complications after surgical treatment are high with a mortality approaching 41% in some parts of Africa. Nutrition for these patients remains a challenge. Acute appendicitis, although not as common in African children, often presents rather late with up to 50% of children presenting with perforation and other complications, and mortality is approximately 4% is some settings. Pyomyositis and necrotizing fasciitis are the more common serious soft-tissue infections, but early recognition and prompt treatment should minimize the occasional mortality. Though common in Africa, the exact impact of human immunodeficiency virus infection on the spectrum and severity of surgical infection in African children is not clear, but it may well worsen the course of infection in these patients.
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PMID:Surgical aspects of bacterial infection in African children. 2247 17

Infections caused by foodborne enteric pathogens including typhoidal and non-typhoidal Salmonella species can mimic symptoms of acute appendicitis. The association between such bacterial pathogens and pathology-proven acute appendicitis has been described, but this link is poorly understood. Here we describe a case of a young man with typhoid fever presenting with histology-proven acute appendicitis requiring urgent appendectomy, and provide a brief review of relevant literature to prompt more widespread recognition of this rare cause of a common surgical emergency.
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PMID:Typhoid Fever and Acute Appendicitis: A Rare Association Not Yet Fully Formed. 2903 62

BACKGROUND Paracoccidioidomycosis is an endemic mycosis in Central and South America caused by the thermally dimorphic fungus Paracoccidioides brasiliensis. Despite its self-limited course and usually asymptomatic infection, some patients may present with a systemic illness mimicking multiple conditions and thus question the general state of their immune system. CASE REPORT A 28-year-old male presented to the hospital with fever, dry cough, and non-pruritic rash with no characteristic distribution for the past 10 days. Past medical history revealed that the patient had worked as a farmer three years ago, had abused cocaine paste over the same period, and also had in the last month presented to the hospital for acute appendicitis. Initial laboratory tests revealed hypereosinophilia greater than 10,000 eosinophils/mL. Infection of P. brasiliensis was confirmed by lymph node, skin, and colonoscopy biopsies. After treatment with itraconazole, the patient's eosinophil count returned to normal and his symptoms resolved. CONCLUSIONS Paracoccidioidomycosis may present as a systemic illness with only marked eosinophilia on initial diagnostic tests. Furthermore, in our patient's case, the high degree of eosinophilia may have contributed towards the patient's appendicitis in the weeks preceding the subacute infection. It is possible that the patient's history of working at a farm and abusing cocaine paste may have contributed to the initial colonization by the fungus.
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PMID:Hypereosinophilia Secondary to Disseminated Paracoccidioidomycosis. 2904 30


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