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)

Authors describe characteristics of this rare disease, as cause of acute abdomen in infancy. They base this on the study of two cases. They establish criteria for differential diagnosis of acute appendicitis, as well as surgical treatment and pathological conditions found during surgery.
...
PMID:[Primary segmental infarction of the omentum in children (author's transl)]. 722 73

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.
...
PMID:[Surgical and anesthetic managements of patients with porphyria]. 761 68

Two young soldiers presented with acute abdomens, then received surgical procedures under initial impression of acute cholecystitis and acute appendicitis respectively. Operative findings did not confirm the initial diagnosis, and the clinical condition did not improve after operation. Scrub typhus was suggested later by clinical manifestations of fever, chills, headache, lymphadenopathy, skin rash and presence of eschar formation; this diagnosis was finally confirmed by positive serologic results of high Weil-Felix OXK agglutination and/or Rickettsia tsutsugammushi immunoflorescence titers in paired sera. Both patients rapidly became afebrile after administration of tetracycline. This unusual presentation with acute abdomen in scrub typhus is emphasized, with caution that the possibility of scrub typhus should be taken considered, especially in patients coming from hyperendemic areas.
...
PMID:Unusual presentation of acute abdomen in scrub typhus: a report of two cases. 764 Nov 27

Primary torsion of the omentum is an unusual cause of an acute abdomen and commonly mimics acute appendicitis. The following report of four obese children is supportive of obesity as a predisposing factor. The paucity of gastrointestinal symptoms, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and the relatively long duration of symptoms, may increase the index of suspicion. In the majority of cases, the diagnosis is made intraoperatively by digital exploration through the muscle-splitting incision. The torsed omentum is easily delivered through the same incision, and excision results in complete recovery.
...
PMID:Primary omental torsion in children. 766 14

In 1978-1988 operations were performed on 92 children: 35 with diverticulitis, 7 with intestinal intussusception, 5 with hemorrhage from an ulcer of the diverticulum, 13 with strangulation or mechanical ileus, 2 with strangulated Littre's hernia, one with torsion of the omentum, 22 with secondary diverticulitis, and in 7 children Meckel's diverticulum was a chance finding during other operations in the cavities. Boys accounted for 60.9' (56) of cases. There were 12 children under one year of age, nine from 1 to 3 years, 17 from 3 to 5 years, 17 from 5 to 7 years, and 12 children aged from 7 to 10 years. The clinical manifestations depended on the pathological changes developing in Meckel's diverticulum. A clinical picture of acute appendicitis developed in diverticulitis, six children had a typical picture of intussusception, and one child had a picture of acute abdomen. Anemia and a stool with dark blood were encountered in hemorrhage from a diverticular ulcer. Seven out of 13 children with ileus had a pronounced clinical picture, in the remaining 5 it was unclear and resembled that of acute appendicitis. Meckel's diverticulum was suspected before the operation in 17 (9.95%) patients. The Volkovich-Dyakonov laparotomy approach was used in 64 children, a pararectal incision in 9, a transrectal incision in 15, a median incision in one patient, hernio-laparotomy was conducted in one and Shpizi's operation in 2 children. Diverticulectomy was accomplished by the oblique-transverse method in 79 children, by the wedge techniques in 5, by the purse-string method in 2 patients, and resection of the intestine with the diverticulum was conducted in 5 children.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Meckel's diverticulum in children]. 767 99

Two cases of acute abdomen--because of acute appendicitis and paralytic ileus--due to cytomegalovirus infection in AIDS patients are reported. In both patients evolution was subacute and cytomegalic inclusions were seen in the histologic examination of the surgical samples. The two patients died after surgery. The possibility of cytomegalovirus infection must be kept in mind in AIDS patients who undergo urgent abdominal laparatomy and early treatment should be instituted.
...
PMID:[Acute abdomen due to cytomegalovirus in AIDS patients. Apropos 2 cases]. 796 67

Twenty-four patients with homozygous beta-thalassaemia who had been splenectomised and currently on treatment were studied retrospectively. They were divided into two groups. Group A: who had splenectomy prior to commencement of any regular blood transfusion. The mean haemoglobin for this group rose from 5.5 gm/dl pre-splenectomy to 7.7 gm/dl post splenectomy (p < 0.001). Group B: who were on regular blood transfusion when they had their splenectomy and the mean blood transfusion requirement dropped from 317 ml/kg/yr to 230 ml/kg/yr of packed red cells following splenectomy (p < 0.001). Three patients who were on regular blood transfusion and desferrioxamine developed Yersinia enterocolitica infection. They presented with fever and signs of an acute abdomen. At laparotomy, 2 of the patients had acute appendicitis. All 3 appendices grew Yersinia enterocolitica and one patient also had a Yersinia enterocolitica septicaemia. If a patient develops fever and enteritis, desferrioxamine should be stopped temporarily and cotrimoxazole started as prophylaxis against systemic Yersiniosis. No cases of pneumoccocal sepsis was reported.
...
PMID:Homozygous beta-thalassaemia: a review of patients who had splenectomy at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Sydney. 800 82

In two autopsy prospective studies, at the Prosectures of the Departmental Hospital and of the Pediatric Hospital in Cluj, we found an incidence of Meckel's diverticulum of 1.16%, 1.46% respectively. Besides, we have retrospectively followed the incidence of the ileal diverticulum during the laparatomies performed at the Pediatric Hospital in Cluj between 1981 and 1990 on an acute abdomen of a supposed appendicular cause. Consulting the pathological bulletins which registered 8,385 laparatomies we found 200 Meckel's diverticula. Of the 200 diverticula, 64 exhibited a pathological process and 136 were trophic, and we suppose that they were found incidentally (incidence of 1.63%, corrected incidence of 1.38%). Up to the age of 16, 4.5% of the diverticula were excised. In the 64 symptomatic cases of ileal diverticulum, 50 presented inflammatory complications, 10 were ulcero-hemorrhagic, two were obstructive, one diverticulum presented an entero-umbilical fistula and one displayed a hemorrhagic infarction. Seventeen of the 200 diverticula presented heterotopic tissues; 12 of the 17 cases were symptomatic; in 64.7% of the cases the heterotopic tissue was the gastric mucous coat. Out of 8,385 laparatomies performed on an acute abdomen of a supposed appendicular cause, in 64 cases the symptomatology was generated by a meckelian pathological process (0.76%). An acute appendicitis was concomitantly present in 22 of the 64 cases.
...
PMID:The ileal diverticulum. Morpho-clinical and epidemiological study. 803 19

Acute appendicitis is the first cause of emergency surgery in children. Actually, emergency abdominal sonography has evolved in differential diagnosis of acute appendicitis in children to differentiate it from other causes of acute abdomen as mesenteric lymphoadenitis, acute right pyelonephritis, acute diverticulitis in Meckel's diverticulum, intestinal intussusception, regional enterits, primary peritonitis, anaphylactoid purpura of Henoch-Schonlein. The aim of this study is the evaluation of the usefulness of abdominal sonography in diagnosing acute appendicitis in our current series of pediatric patients. We have operated 102 patients afflicted by appendicitis admitted to the pediatric department of Ospedale San Raffaele, Milano in a period of 5 years and operated on for appendectomy. In the last 2 years 36 patients were evaluated with abdominal sonography. This diagnostic tool showed in 34 (94.4%) a liquid effusion, sometimes thick of the right iliac fossa. In 2 patients the appendix had thickened layers, was edematous and the lumen was clearly filled with debris. Abdominal sonography has given a clear cut picture of the acute inflammatory process of the appendix. None of these patients has suffered from septic or obstructive complications. Mean duration of hospital stay was 6.35 days (3-15 days). Differential diagnosis of acute appendicitis can be extremely variable, from simple, paradigmatic situations to the most intriguing ones. This concept is well emphasized by William Silen when he says that "differential diagnosis of acute appendicits is an encyclopedic compendium of every abdominal disease that causes pain" in the 11th edition of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Current diagnostic-therapeutic trends in treatment of pediatric appendicitis]. 803 58

Acute appendicitis is the most common cause of acute abdomen requiring surgical intervention. The clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis is not always easy due to variable symptomatology, particularly at the onset. The contributions of history-taking and physical examination in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis was studied in connection with the Research Committee of the World Organization of Gastroenterology (OMGE) survey of acute abdominal pain. Especially the suitability of diagnostic parameters in the construction of an expert system for automatic decision making was studied. The results clearly show that it is possible to construct an expert system for automatic decision making in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis.
...
PMID:Parameters for a knowledge base for acute appendicitis. 805 50


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>