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Query: UMLS:C0085693 (
acute appendicitis
)
3,606
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The first report of
acute appendicitis
complicating pregnancy in Zambia is presented. The diagnostic problems were differentiation between
Urinary tract infection
concealed accidental haemorrhage and
acute appendicitis
. However emergency appendicectomy was performed and the outcome was satisfactory. The patient went into premature labour but normally delivered a 2,100g baby. The literature is reviewed; an increased awareness of this condition in our environment is advocated.
...
PMID:Acute appendicitis complicating pregnancy. A case report. 72 58
In this series, nine pregnant patients had appendectomy. Seven patients had
acute appendicitis
; pyuria and symptoms suggesting
urinary tract infection
delayed diagnosis in one whose appendix perforated. Abdominal pain and nausea with or without vomiting were presenting symptoms in all of the patients. Tenderness in the right lower quadrant was present in six. Eight patients, including two with a normal appendix, had leukocytosis with a left shift. There was no fetal or maternal loss. In addition, I reviewed more than 900 other cases of appendectomy during pregnancy, as reported in the literature since 1960. Among 713 previously reported cases of confirmed appendicitis, rupture had occurred in 25%. There were five maternal deaths, all in the group of patients with perforation. Perinatal mortality was 4.8% among patients with acute inflammation only and 19.4% in those with perforative appendicitis. The diagnosis rests on clinical acumen, and prompt surgical intervention is the key to good outcome.
...
PMID:Appendicitis complicating pregnancy. 173 28
Seven cases of the Curtis-Fitz-Hugh syndrome diagnosed over a six month period are reviewed with particular reference to the widely ranging modes of presentation. All presented as acute surgical emergencies but unlike other series, right upper quadrant pain was the presenting symptom in only one case. Right upper quadrant pain nonetheless, featured to a variable extent in all cases, being relatively shortlived in three. Conditions mimicked included left renal colic,
acute appendicitis
, pulmonary embolism, acute cholecystitis, chronic cholecystitis and
urinary tract infection
. In five cases symptoms dated back to a difficult or complicated termination of pregnancy and in one case a hysterectomy had been performed twelve years previously at which time the patient had documented evidence of pelvic inflammation. Diagnosis was made laparoscopically and all symptoms responded satisfactorily to a four week course of tetracycline.
...
PMID:Curtis-Fitz-Hugh syndrome: the new mimicking disease? 294 32
A case of intrauterine blood passing into the abdominal cavity and resulting in a clinical picture similar to
acute appendicitis
is presented. To our knowledge, hematometra presenting in this manner has not been reported in the medical literature. Some disease processes which more commonly mimic
acute appendicitis
include nonspecific mesenteric adenitis, gynecologic disorders, diverticulitis, and
urinary tract infection
. Unusual diseases presenting in this manner include splenic torsion, infarcted omentum, ileocecal tuberculosis, and duodenal hematoma.
...
PMID:Hematometra presenting as acute appendicitis: a case report. 339 Feb 53
A prospective study was conducted on 344 children aged from 3 months to 16 years with
acute appendicitis
. Most children presented with typical features of
acute appendicitis
(70%) or peritonitis (28%). Atypical presentation was uncommon and occurred only in seven young children, masquerading as intestinal obstruction, gastroenteritis or
urinary tract infection
. Prolonged delay in surgery was associated with a rise in incidence of late appendicitis (gangrenous and perforated appendicitis). This rise was especially marked 37 h after onset of symptoms. The main causes of delay were inability of the parents and primary care medical practitioners to recognize the disease early. Surgeons contributed very little to the delay. High risk factors for postappendectomy sepsis were young children under 6 years old, late appendicitis, obese patients, inferior systemic antibiotic regimes and inexperienced surgeons. Young children had high postoperative sepsis mainly because of the high incidence of late appendicitis due to their inability to express their symptoms properly. They were not especially prone to postappendectomy sepsis; they had the same degree of appendicitis compared with older children. Measures to decrease the postappendectomy morbidity are suggested.
...
PMID:Acute appendicitis in children. 343 36
A new cephalosporin antibiotic, cefmenoxime (CMX) was administered to 22 patients aged 5 days to 8 years, and who had moderate or severe pediatric infections, to examine its clinical effect. The infections were 3 of acute bronchitis, 2 cases of asthmatic bronchitis, 6 of acute pneumonia, 1 of Mycoplasma pneumonia, 2 of sepsis (1 accompanied with pneumonia), 3 of vacterial meningitis, 2 of
urinary tract infection
, 1 of
acute appendicitis
, 1 of aseptic meningitis and 1 of fever of undetermined origin. The drug was administered by one shot intravenous injection 4 times daily at the dose of 40 approximately 200 mg/kg/day. The drug was administered for 3 approximately 15 days, the total dosage administered being 0.7 approximately 43.5 g. Clinically, excellent, good and fair response was obtained in 2, 11 and 4 cases, respectively, the drug being effective in all cases excluding the 5 cases in which judgement was unknown. The 6 strains of bacteria isolated from the lesion as the assumed causative bacteria (1 strain of S. pneumoniae, 2 of H. influenzae, 2 of E. coli, 1 of K. pneumoniae) were all eradicated after drug administration. No notable side effects were produced.
...
PMID:[Clinical studies on cefmenoxime in pediatric field]. 630 93
A retrospective analysis of 224 patients was carried out to evaluate the outcome of elderly patients after operation for acute abdominal pain. The mean (+/- SD) age of the patients was 74.6 (+/- 6.4) years (range 65-96) and the male/female ratio was 104/120. The most common causes for an emergency operation were acute biliary disease (26%),
acute appendicitis
(18%), gastrointestinal cancer (11%) and incarcerated hernia (10%). Twenty-nine patients (13%) died during the one-month postoperative period. The most common causes of death were gastrointestinal cancer (24%), ischaemic heart disease (14%) and complicated peptic ulcer disease (14%). Ninety-two (41%) patients had non-lethal postoperative complications, the commonest of which were wound infection or dehiscence (28%),
urinary tract infection
(17%), and paralytic ileus (8%). Ten patients were reoperated on for postoperative complications. The mean hospitalization time was 12.5 days (range 1-99). The results in the analysis of the long-term outcome (mean follow-up time 21 months) revealed that 17% of the primarily survived patients had died. Living patients were satisfied with the treatment and only a few patients were institutionalised after surgery. We conclude that both the short-term and long-term outcome of elderly patients after an emergency abdominal operation is good in benign diseases, and active surgery is justified.
...
PMID:The outcome of elderly patients after operation for acute abdomen. 873 27
The effect of
acute appendicitis
(AA) on aerobic
urinary tract infection
was investigated. Abnormal urinalysis and
urinary tract infection
in patients with AA have seldom been reported previously. Appendectomy was performed in 84 patients with no previous urogenital, retroperitoneal, or pelvic disease, trauma or operation and AA was pathologically confirmed in 66 of them. Aerobic cultures of appendiceal tissue and mesenteriolum were done. Control groups included 25 patients with inguinal hernioplasty and 40 patients with varicocele repair. Urinalysis and urine culture were done prior to operation, and on days 1, 3, and 6 postoperatively. The "O" serogrouping identification of Escherichia coli (E. coli) was performed in the appendix, mesenteriolum and urine. Abnormal urinalysis was found in 48% of patients with AA before appendectomy, and in 12% on day 6 postoperatively (P < 0.05). Aerobes were isolated from urine in 32% of patients before appendectomy and in 24% on day 6 following surgery. E. coli was more often found in the appendix than in the mesenteriolum (P < 0.05). In seven out of 66 patients (11%) bacteriuria of more than 10(5) was found. All of them had identical aerobic strain isolated from the appendix, mesenteriolum and urine (E. coli in 4, Streptococcus faecalis in 2 and Corynebacterium species in one patient) according to antimicrobial susceptibility testing and "O" serogrouping of E. coli. Lower urinary tract infection was clinically manifested on day 3 postoperatively in 4 of them and in none from the control groups. Bacteria spreading from the appendix to the retroperitoneal space may invade the urinary tract and cause either symptomatic or asymptomatic
urinary tract infection
in patients with AA.
...
PMID:Urinary tract infection in acute appendicitis. 947 98
Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical studies were performed in pediatrics on tazobactam/piperacillin (TAZ/PIPC), a combined drug of a new beta-lactamase inhibitor tazobactam and piperacillin at a ratio of 1:4. 1. Serum levels and urinary excretions of TAZ, PIPC and desethyl piperacillin (DEt-PIPC), a metabolite of PIPC, after one shot intravenous administration of 50 mg/kg of TAZ/PIPC to two children (6-7 years old) were investigated. The serum TAZ level at 0.08 hour was 50.8-51.0 micrograms/ml after administration. Then TAZ concentrations gradually decreased with half-lives of 0.38-0.45 hour, and reached 1.0-1.4 micrograms/ml after 2 hours and was not detected after 3 hours and 6 hours. Serum PIPC levels at 0.08 hour was 167.0-231.0 micrograms/ml after administration. Then PIPC concentrations gradually decreased with half-lives of 0.41-0.55 hour, and reached 1.2-2.4 micrograms/ml after 3 hours and was not detected after 6 hours. DEt-PIPC was detected slightly in serum. A ratio of TAZ to PIPC was about 1 to 4 in serum at each time. Urinary recovery rates of TAZ in the first 6 hours after administration of TAZ/PIPC were 33.5-90.1% and those of PIPC were 41.9-77.8% and those of DEt-PIPC were 1.5-2.8%. 2. TAZ/PIPC was administered to 27 pediatric patients (their ages ranged between 2 months and 11 years old) with various infections, and clinical and bacteriological effects and adverse reactions were investigated. Single doses were 26.2-55.6 mg/kg, frequencies of administration were 3-4 times a day, and durations of administration were 3 1/3-7 1/3 days, and total dosages were 4.5-33.75 g. Clinical effects were evaluable in 26 cases. Responses were rated as "good" in acute purulent tonsillitis 1 case and acute purulent otitis media 1 case, as "excellent" in acute sinusitis 1 case, as "excellent" in 2 and "good" in 1 out of 3 cases of acute bronchitis, as "excellent" in 13 and "good" 2 out of 15 cases of acute pneumonia, as "excellent" in acute
urinary tract infection
2 cases and as "excellent" in acute enteritis in 1 case,
acute appendicitis
in 1 case and lymphadentis in 1 case. In all cases, the results were rated as "good" or "excellent". Antimicrobial effects against a total of 10 strains identified or assumed to be pathogenic bacteria were evaluated. The 10 strains of bacteria included 4 strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae, 3 strains of Haemophilus influenzae (2 strains beta-lactamase producing), 2 strains of beta-lactamase producing Moraxella catarrhalis, 1 strain of beta-lactamase producing Morganella morganii. All the bacteria listed here were judged to have been eradicated. Adverse reaction was observed in 1 case with mild diarrhea. As abnormal changes in laboratory data, leucocytopenia in 1 case, elevation of GOT. GPT in 2 cases and eosinophilia in 1 case were observed. On the basis of the findings, TAZ/PIPC was considered to be effective and safe in the treatment of pediatric infections.
...
PMID:[Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical evaluation of tazobactam/piperacillin in pediatrics]. 969 67
Over a one-year period (Nov. 1996-Nov. 1997), a total of 154 patients are admitted on an emergency basis, with deferred emergency and for routine treatment in the Clinic of Emergency Surgery. They are distributed in three groups, as follows: patients not requiring perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis and postoperative antibiotic therapy--27, patients subjected to perioperative parenteral antibiotic prophylaxis under adequate hospital conditions--121, and patients undergoing antibiotic prophylaxis in conditions inappropriate for its application--six. The drug schemes elaborated are in conformity with worldwide and Bulgarian experience along this line, and with the concrete hospital and economical conditions in this country. In all patient indicated for antibiotic prophylaxis the listed below antibacterial agents (presented as drug schemes) are administered i.v. a single time prior to anesthesia induction: in operations on the gastrointestinal tract except for interventions in
acute appendicitis
: cephalotin/cefazolin 2.0 g and metronidazole 0.5 g i.v.; in operations for
acute appendicitis
: amoxicillin/clavulanate 1.2 g and petronidazole 0.5 f i.v.; biliary surgery free of extrahepatic cholestasis: cephalotin/cefazolin 2.0 g i.v.; biliary surgery with present or preceding extrahepatic cholestasis: cefotetan 2 g i.v.; contaminated liver cysts (parasitic and nonparasitic): cefotetan 2 g i.v.; abdominal trauma without perforation of a hollow organ: cefotetan 2 g i.v.; in plastic repair of the anterior abdominal wall (congenital defects, postoperative eventration) and in poor risk patients (local and general status: cephalotin/cefazolin 2.0 g i.v. In 135 patients the postoperative period runs a course free of complications worthy of notice. Complications directly linked to introduction of the method proposed are recorded in ten cases: operative wound suppuration (4) and hospital infection (6). Complications not related directly to the procedure are observed in nine cases:
urinary tract infection
(4), bronchopneumonia (2), fever with unknown source of infection (including negative hemoculture) necessitating additional antibiotic therapy (2) and secondary infection (within a week of intervention) necessitating further therapy with antibiotics. The specific features of antibiotic prophylaxis used in the various types of operative interventions are discussed from microbiological, clinical and pharmacotherapeutic viewpoints. The obtained results are compared with pertinent literature data on the issue with a special reference to the clinical efficacy attained. They mirror the approach against the background of the concrete hospital conditions in this country. The method developed is fully consistent with the level of surgical expertise in Bulgaria. All efforts should be aimed at intrahospital environment improvement by means of meticulous asepsis and antisepsis.
...
PMID:[Our experience in introducing current antibiotic prophylaxis into abdominal surgery--the initial results]. 985 39
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