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

Although the morbidity of porphyria is rare, the surgical and anesthetic managements of patients with porphyria should be prudent, for various stresses including surgery and anesthesia may cause occurrence or exacerbation of this disease, occasionally resulting in the mortal course. Several drugs such as barbiturate, diazepam, pentazocine, and pancuronium, which can be used during anesthesia or after operation, reportedly exacerbate the disease. Furthermore, the acute exacerbation of porphyria may be misdiagnosed as acute abdomen, ileus, acute appendicitis, cholelithiasis, urolithiasis, or ectopic pregnancy. The managements of patients with acute porphyria during anesthesia and after surgery are discussed along with the introduction of our case report. Since there is no definitive treatment of porphyria, the most important thing is to understand the disease and to prevent the acute exacerbation of the disease. When patients are suspected of porphyria or possible porphyria, careful management is required during anesthesia and after operation with selecting secure drugs against the disease.
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PMID:[Surgical and anesthetic managements of patients with porphyria]. 761 68

Abdominal pain in pregnancy is most commonly caused by complications of the pregnancy, e.g., abortion, ectopic pregnancy and abruptio placentae. A careful history and methodical physical examination and, if necessary, simple ultrasonographic investigations will reveal the cause in most of these conditions. In a few cases of abdominal pain in pregnancy a gynaecological condition, such as torsion of an ovarian cyst, or a nongynaecological (medical or surgical) one is the cause. Some of these conditions are serious, e.g., acute appendicitis, and unless the correct diagnosis is made and the appropriate management promptly instituted both the mother and her baby may suffer tragic consequences. Moreover, these conditions are more likely to be misdiagnosed during pregnancy. This is because the anatomical and physiological changes which occur in pregnancy tend to change and obtund the expected clinical features and laboratory data which are used to diagnose these conditions. Their early diagnosis therefore requires a high index of suspicion together with awareness of the ways in which they may present in pregnancy.
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PMID:Abdominal pain in pregnancy. 794 66

Sterilization by tubal occlusive methods is not always successful. This fact is not, however, well recognized among general surgeons. When failures occur, ectopic pregnancy is the usual outcome, most commonly in the Fallopian tube. Ectopic pregnancy has a reported mortality of approximately 3.5/1000, with the majority of deaths associated with delay in diagnosis. The failure to consider this possibility of ectopic pregnancy after tubal ligation when female patients present with right-sided abdominal pain causes health personnel to commonly misdiagnose the condition of appendicitis. A 26 year old woman presented to the Accident and Emergency Department of the Royal Hobart Hospital with lower abdominal pain mainly in the right iliac fossa. Pain was intermittent for two weeks prior to presentation. On the morning of presentation, the pain became severe and was exacerbated by coughing and movements. The patient was nauseated, but had not vomited; there was neither fever nor rigors. Four years earlier, in England, the patient had undergone elective laparoscopic sterilization. Sexually active, she believed that she was menstruating at the time of presentation, especially since her last menstruation occurred four weeks previously. The patient was noted upon examination to have a "grey look," pulse rate of 80 beats/minute, blood pressure of 120/80 mmHg, and a generally tender abdomen, maximally in the right iliac fossa. There were no bowel sounds and rectal examination proved to be extremely painful in all directions. The accident and emergency staff took blood for a full blood count, serum human chorionic gonadotrophin, and arranged surgical consultation. The surgical diagnosis was for acute appendicitis and the patient was transferred to the operating theater for appendectomy. Just prior to anesthetic induction, the pathology results became available, indicating a hemoglobin of 10.3 g/dl and a positive serum HCG. The diagnosis was thus revised to ruptured ectopic pregnancy and laparotomy was performed through a Pfannenstiel incision. 1000 ml of blood was removed from the peritoneal cavity, a ruptured tubal pregnancy was found in the right distal tube, and the appendix was normal. A right salpingo-oophorectomy was performed after which the patient recovered uneventfully and was discharged five days postoperatively. Histopathology confirmed a ruptured ectopic gestation.
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PMID:Misdiagnosis of appendicitis in tubally sterilized women. 846 65

Four different major clinical complications were identified in a retrospective analysis of 2495 in-vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles resulting in oocyte retrieval. The severe form of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) occurred in 18 patients, giving a prevalence for this complication of 0.7%. Seven (39%) of these 18 patients had previously been diagnosed as having polycystic ovaries. Eleven patients were admitted with moderate OHSS. Adnexal torsion was diagnosed in two patients. Ovariectomy was considered necessary in both cases. Complications of the transvaginal procedure occurred in seven cases (0.3%): one patient had an acute appendicitis with puncture holes in the appendix, six patients were admitted shortly after oocyte retrieval with a pelvic inflammatory disease. Of the 624 pregnancies obtained, 13 were ectopic, giving an ectopic pregnancy rate of 2.1%. It is concluded that serious clinical complications of IVF treatment are rare. However, patients should be counselled for the occurrence of serious procedure-related complications before entering an IVF programme.
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PMID:The incidence of major clinical complications in a Dutch transport IVF programme. 908 Feb 31

The symptom of lower abdominal pain in women is extremely common and does not always indicate the presence of serious illness. However, women with certain serious conditions such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), acute appendicitis, ectopic pregnancy and other complications of pregnancy may present initially with this symptom. Therefore, in managing women with lower abdominal pain care should be taken to exclude any serious condition before dismissing the patient. PID is a condition in which there is infection of the reproductive tract of women above the internal os of the cervix. This usually occurs as a result of an ascending cervical infection caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis and anaerobic bacteria. The immediate and long term effects of PID include salpingitis, pelvic abscess, peritonitis, infertility and predisposition to tubal ectopic pregnancy. Women with lower abdominal pain should be assessed carefully and if PID is the cause they should be treated for gonococcal, chlamydial and anaerobic bacterial infection. Other gynaecological and surgical causes of lower abdominal pain and the immediate complications of PID require urgent referral to a specialist. PID is associated with significant morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Syndromic management of sexually transmitted diseases. Part 4--The management of lower abdominal pain in women. 1018 53

The presentation of acute abdominal pain in young women is not an unusual occurrence in casualty and gynaecology departments. Both acute appendicitis and ectopic pregnancy have to be considered and investigated, as these two conditions are accepted as the most common surgical causes of an acute abdomen. Difficulties in correctly identifying the cause of the pain can be hazardous to the patient and care needs to be taken in obtaining a prompt and accurate diagnosis enabling the most appropriate management. The case report presented here describes the extremely unusual occurrence of both these acute conditions happening simultaneously with the added complication of an ongoing twin pregnancy and it highlights the need to look beyond the most obvious diagnosis and always to expect the unexpected.
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PMID:Simultaneous rupturing heterotopic pregnancy and acute appendicitis in an in-vitro fertilization twin pregnancy. 1022 26

Authors report three cases of acute abdomen due a probable appendicitis and submit to laparoscopic procedure. In the first case acute abdomen was due to a bowel obstruction secondary to an ectopic pregnancy; in the second case acute appendicitis was associated with a rare congenital malformation (atresia of uterus); in third case acute abdomen was due to a rare case of torsion of accessory spleen in an adult. In all the cases laparoscopy demonstrated the elective procedure in urgency, permitting the diagnosis and the surgical treatment of acute abdomen with the post-operatory advantage of the technique.
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PMID:[Laparoscopy in an abdominal emergency: the diagnosis and therapy in 3 clinical cases of acute abdomen]. 1043 61

The most significant complication of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in women is pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), which is responsible for considerable medical, social, and economic problems. Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, or both cause PID in at least 50% of cases. Other microorganisms that are part of the abnormal vaginal flora also cause PID. Gonorrhea rates have quickly fallen in most developed countries, but chlamydia infection rates are still high in developed countries as well as in developing countries. The clinical signs and symptoms of PID have changed over time. More and more PID cases are classified as atypical or subclinical. Typical PID is rare. A strong association exists between chlamydia infection and tubal factor infertility or ectopic pregnancy in women with or without a history of PID. Health providers are concerned about the problem of unrecognized PID. Thus, recommendations for PID diagnosis have changed. A syndromic diagnosis of PID is advocated. The minimum criteria for syndromic diagnosis of PID include lower abdominal tenderness, bilateral adnexal tenderness, cervical motion tenderness, and no evidence of competing diagnosis (e.g., acute appendicitis). Application of this improved approach will provide appropriate treatment earlier in the course of PID. PID-related morbidity (i.e., infertility and ectopic pregnancy) is a considerable public health problem worldwide. In order to prevent PID, clinicians and public health specialists need to understand the interactions of PID-causing microorganisms with the host immune system. By the time PID symptoms are detected, considerable tubal damage already exists limiting the effect of tertiary prevention of PID. Secondary prevention keeps lower genital tract infection from moving up to the upper genital tract. Health providers play a key role in secondary prevention by screening for STDs and in primary prevention by counseling patients about safer sex practices.
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PMID:Immunopathogenesis of pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility -- what do we know and what shall we do? 1234 74

Ectopic pregnancies can be very difficult to diagnose at initial admission. This paper reviewed the morbidity and mortality associated with misdiagnosis of ectopic gestation over a 15-year period (1985-99) at Ile-Ife, Nigeria. There were 380 confirmed ectopic pregnancies of 35 857 live births, giving an incidence of 10.5 per 1000 live births. Of the 380 cases, 38 (10%) were misdiagnosed initially at presentation. Mistaken diagnoses include pelvic inflammatory diseases, cholera, acute appendicitis, typhoid enteritis, incomplete septic abortion, uterine fibroid with menorrhagia, malaria, gastroenteritis, peptic ulcer and intestinal obstruction. There were five maternal deaths among the 38 misdiagnosed cases compared to two maternal deaths among the 342 initially correctly diagnosed cases. Significant morbidity included prolonged hospital stay, increased hospital costs and an enterocutaneous fistula. To improve the chances of correct diagnosis at initial admission, accurate menstrual and sexual history should be obtained. Facilities for improved diagnosis such as serum beta HCG and transvaginal ultrasonography should be provided. Colleagues from other specialities should be educated to increase their suspicion of ectopic pregnancy in any woman of childbearing age and perform the appropriate investigations.
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PMID:Mortality and morbidity associated with misdiagnosis of ectopic pregnancy in a defined Nigerian population. 1252 28

A 25-year-old woman had signs of an acute surgical abdomen. Differential diagnoses were ectopic pregnancy and acute appendicitis. Diagnostic laparoscopy revealed an apparent inflamed appendix and left-sided unruptured tubal ectopic pregnancy. This case illustrates the importance of considering multiple pathologic disorders in a patient with an acute surgical abdomen, especially in pregnancy. Furthermore, it shows that laparoscopy constitutes the optimal treatment modality in patients with multiple diagnoses, because it combines multifocal diagnosis and treatment without additional postoperative morbidity.
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PMID:Concurrent tubal ectopic pregnancy and acute appendicitis. 1826 53


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