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

This study demonstrates the appearance of large bowel diseases on magnetic resonance (MR) images using breath-hold T2-weighted half-Fourier acquisition snapshot turbo spin-echo (HASTE), breath-hold T1-weighted spoiled gradient-echo (SGE), and breath-hold gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted SGE with and without fat-suppression sequences. The study represents a collective experience using a generalized combined abdominal-pelvic imaging protocol. Of 29 patients, 27 had surgical, endoscopic, microbiological, and/or histopathological correlation, and 2 had a diagnosis based on characteristic imaging findings. Fifteen patients had neoplastic disease including colon adenocarcinoma (n = 11), rectosigmoid carcinoid (n = 1), familial adenomatous polyposis (n = 2), and cecal lipoma (n = 1). Fourteen patients had non-neoplastic disease including diverticulosis (n = 6), ischemic colitis (n = 2), pseudomembranous colitis (n = 2), acute appendicitis with periappendiceal abscess (n = 2), Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI) colitis (n = 1), and Crohn's proctocolitis (n = 1). In all 15 patients with neoplastic diseases, MR imaging depicted the primary lesions and demonstrated local extent. Mass lesions were best shown on T2-weighted HASTE and gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed SGE images. Of 14 patients with non-neoplastic diseases, inflammatory changes were best shown on gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed T1-weighted SGE images in all cases. MR imaging with fast scanning breath-hold techniques and intravenous gadolinium enhancement provided good depiction and characterization of large bowel diseases.
...
PMID:Colon diseases: MR evaluation using combined T2-weighted single-shot echo train spin-echo and gadolinium-enhanced spoiled gradient-echo sequences. 1093 93

The negative influence of obesity on the detection rate of the appendix for US in adults has been reported. It has been assumed that obesity is a limiting factor in the detection of the appendix with US in children as well, but this has not yet been proven. The aim of our study was to evaluate whether nutritional condition (defined by the body mass index-for-age percentiles: BMI-FAP) influences the detection of the appendix in children on US. One hundred twenty-six children (65 girls and 61 boys) with a mean age of 11.4 years with clinically suspected acute appendicitis underwent ultrasound on a commercially available high-end machine (HDI 5000, ATL, Bothell, Wash.). The BMI was calculated, and children were divided in three weight groups in accordance with the BMI-FAP, and were correlated with US findings. Evaluation of the three weight groups in accordance with the BMI-FAP demonstrated significant differences ( p=0.04) in the detection of the appendix. There was no statistical significance for the BMI, weight, height, and age solely for the detection of the appendix. In children there is a correlation between the nutritional condition as defined by the BMI-FAP and the detection of the appendix.
...
PMID:Ultrasound of the appendix in children: is the child too obese? 1276 62