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)

This case reports the concomitant findings of carcinoid tumor within a Meckel's diverticulum presenting as an acute abdomen in an adult male. Most Meckel's diverticula remain asymptomatic throughout life, and symptomatic diverticula are virtually nonexistent in older adults. Meckel's diverticulitis is clinically indistinguishable from acute appendicitis, and abnormal or symptomatic diverticula are generally resected. Surgical treatment of Meckel's diverticula is recommended for children during exploration. However, resection is controversial in asymptomatic adults. Carcinoid tumors are the most common primary tumor of the small bowel. The duration of symptoms before diagnosis varies from 2 to 20 years, and half of all patients have incurable abdominal disease at first-look surgery. Metastatic events occur most commonly in the liver with a generally poor prognosis. Surgical resection is the treatment of choice. Both Meckel's diverticula and carcinoid tumor are rare clinical entities, and carcinoid tumors occurring within a Meckel's diverticulum are even more uncommon. Thus, the natural history is difficult to predict and treatment recommendations vary. Solitary, localized, asymptomatic nodules less than 1 cm are generally managed with diverticulectomy or segmental resection. Larger or multiple lesions require wide excision of bowel and mesentery, and hepatic resection may be required for metastatic disease.
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PMID:Meckel's diverticulitis secondary to carcinoid tumor: an unusual presentation of the acute abdomen in an adult. 1497 61

Gangrene of Meckel's diverticulum is uncommon and its pre-operative diagnosis is difficult. We report three cases with different presentations--simulating acute appendicitis, intestinal obstruction, and strangulation of the bowel.
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PMID:Gangrene of Meckel's diverticulum. 1503 41

Meckel's diverticulum is a relatively common gastrointestinal entity which occasionally causes complications. Meckel's diverticulum is classically described to mimic acute appendicitis when inflamed as well as being a cause of unexplained luminal gastrointestinal bleeding. An unusual cause of spontaneous non traumatic haemoperitoneum found during surgery performed for a suspected acute appendicitis in a 22-year old female is described. The patient was found to have a significant haemoperitoneum due to a bleeding serosal vessel of a Meckel's diverticulum. The diverticulum was routinely excised. It was macroscopically and histologically devoid of inflammation. The bleeding vessel was not found to be abnormal or part of an arteriovenous malformation.
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PMID:Spontaneous haemoperitoneum secondary to a Meckel's diverticulum. 1557 Oct 33

Meckel's diverticulum, which is a remnant of the omphalomesenteric or vitelline duct, is the most common congenital abnormality of the gastrointestinal system. Urachal abnormalities, resulting from anomalous urogenital development, are not observed frequently and case reports are mainly represented in literature. The presence of these two congenital anomalies together is a very rare pathology. Complications arising from a Meckel's diverticulum or urachal remnant may clinically mimic acute appendicitis and other surgical pathologies. We report on a patient who underwent surgery for acute appendicitis when it was discovered that the symptoms were produced by a perforated Meckel's diverticulitis. In the course of the surgery, a urachal remnant was found to coexist with the diverticulum.
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PMID:Coexistence of a Meckel's diverticulum and a urachal remnant. 1618 22

Foreign body perforation of Meckel's diverticulum is a very rare event. We report two cases of fish bone perforation of Meckel's diverticulum that presented within 5 days of each other. Both patients presented with acute abdomen and were initially suspected to have acute appendicitis. The diagnosis was only made at surgery when the appendix was found to be normal and Meckel's diverticulum was found to be inflamed and perforated by a fish bone. Both cases were treated successfully with Meckel's diverticulectomy.
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PMID:Fish bone perforation of Meckel's diverticulum: a rare event? 1623 83

Acute appendicitis in infants is a very unusual disease, but associated to structural defects like patent peritoneovaginal duct, Meckel's diverticulum, clubfeet, and Moebius syndrome is extremely rare. Case report. A male of two months-old with this association is presented. Left inguinal swelling and acute abdomen syndrome were identified. In laparotomy, iguinal defect and a gangrenous appendicitis were observed. Appendectomy was performed and postoperative recovery was unevenful.
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PMID:[Appendicitis in a two-months old infant with a peritoneovaginal duct]. 1635 88

Abdominal fistula caused by an ingested wooden spit, which penetrated the intestinal wall and remained in the abdominal wall: a laparascopy was performed in a 41-year-old man suffering from acute appendicitis and an inflamed Meckel's diverticulum. After removal of the appendix and the diverticulum, a fistula developed in the excision channel of the left quadrant of the abdominal wall post-operatively. Despite repeated incision of the abscess in the course of 2 months, the fistula did not heal. Ultrasound examination of the abdominal wall was therefore performed. The postoperative status was without conspicuous findings. We could, however, detect a foreign body, a few centimetres long and 2-3 mm thick, displaying a smooth surface, deep down in the abdominal wall. A fistulography confirmed the diagnosis. After removal of the wooden spit, complete healing of the fistula in the abdominal wall was observed. Subsequently, the patient reported to have eaten a beef roulade, fixed with a wooden spit, 7 weeks before the abdominal operation.
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PMID:[Unusual postoperative fistula of the abdominal wall, caused by an ingested wooden spit perforating the intestine and lodging itself in the abdominal wall]. 1647 Apr 81

At our institution, helical CT of the abdomen and pelvis with intravenous and rectal contrast (CTRC) has become the modality of choice for investigation of patients with right lower quadrant pain and clinical suspicion of acute appendicitis. CTRC has proven useful for the diagnosis of acute appendicitis (AA) and at the same time identifies alternative diagnoses mimicking AA. This pictorial assay illustrates the imaging findings of AA and its mimickers including primary epiploic appendagitis, right-sided diverticulitis, torsion of Meckel's diverticulum, gynecologic disorders, obstructive uropathy, right lower lobe pneumonia, and other conditions.
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PMID:Alternative diagnoses of acute appendicitis on helical CT with intravenous and rectal contrast. 1732 Jul 73

An unusual case of acute abdomen was caused by the inflammation of ectopic pancreatic tissue in a Meckel's diverticulum. A 49-year-old man presented with acute abdominal pain, and the clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis was established. During laparotomy, a normal appendix of unusual localization near the gallbladder and a Meckel's diverticulum with an inflamed tip were found. Histological examination showed acute inflammation of heterotopic pancreatic tissue along with normal ectopic gastric and duodenal mucosa within the wall of the diverticulum. Fat necrosis was also ascertained. The authors believe that this is the first report of acute inflammation of ectopic pancreatic tissue and the presence of normal ectopic gastric and duodenal tissue in the same Meckel's diverticulum.
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PMID:Inflammation of ectopic pancreatic tissue in a Meckel's diverticulum causing acute abdominal symptoms: a case report and review of the literature. 1922 75

20 patients with the complicated forms of Meckel diverticulum are treated. The nosological forms were: acute diverticulitis (n=16), acute ileus (n=2), intestinal bleeding (n=1) and perforation of diverticular wall with foreign body n=1). All cases were diagnosed only intraoperatively. The majority of patients with the acute diverticulitis presented a clinical picture of an acute appendicitis, on the cause of which they were operated on. Meckel diverticulum was found 40-140 sm from the ileocecal angle. Surgical treatment consisted of the wedge ileal resection and, in 6 patients, appendectomy. There were no deaths.
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PMID:[The complicated forms of Meckel diverticulum]. 1949 57


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