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Query: UMLS:C0085693 (
acute appendicitis
)
3,606
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four cases of diabetic ketoacidosis presenting with abdominal pain are reported. Case 1: a 14-year-old boy suffered from sudden onset of mid-abdominal pain, then migrating to the right lower quadrant. Nausea and vomiting occurred subsequently. Appendectomy was performed under the impression of
acute appendicitis
in an outside surgical clinic. The patient became comatose the next day and then was transferred to our hospital. Diabetic ketoacidosis was diagnosed after the detection of hyperglycemia, glycosuria, and ketonuria on the day of admission. Unfortunately, he expired on the same day in spite of vigorous resuscitation. Case 2: a 9-year-old boy complained of abdominal pain for 10 days. There was no specific finding in the physical examination. Diabetic ketoacidosis was confirmed four days later when conscious disturbance, dehydration, and tachypnea were noticed. Case 3: a 10-year-old girl presented with a history of intermittent abdominal pain for one month. The character of the abdominal pain was nonspecific. Glycosuria was detected in a pediatric clinic. Diabetic ketoacidosis was confirmed after her referral to our hospital. Case 4: a 5-year-old girl suffered from acute abdominal pain for four hours. She was found to have tachypnea,
lethargy
, and ill-looking. Diabetic ketoacidosis was diagnosed after serial examinations. The abdominal pain in diabetic ketoacidosis may lead the pediatrician into diagnostic error. Therefore, when a child presented with non-specific abdominal pain, a routine urine sugar should be checked in order not to miss the possibility of diabetic ketoacidosis.
...
PMID:[Abdominal pain in diabetic ketoacidosis: report of four cases]. 212 98
Differentiating
acute appendicitis
from other causes of acute abdominal pain in children frequently remains unsatisfactory. To determine whether initial historical and physical examination findings might predict final diagnoses, 246 patients with complaints of nontraumatic and nonrecurrent acute abdominal pain were studied. All were between three and 18 years of age and had presented to a hospital-based pediatric emergency department. Each family was telephoned an average of 5.1 days after the visit to determine the patient's subsequent clinical course; operative notes and pathology reports were reviewed for patients receiving surgery. Of these patients with acute abdominal pain, both fever and vomiting were present in 18 of the 24 who eventually had diagnoses of appendicitis, compared with 49 of 222 patients with other final diagnoses (P less than 0.01, with negative predictive value 0.97, sensitivity 0.75, and specificity 0.78, but positive predictive value only 0.27). The duration of the pain at presentation and the frequency of other symptoms (eg, diarrhea, dysuria, anorexia, and
lethargy
) were unrelated, however, to final diagnosis, as was the duration of the pain and whether abdominal tenderness initially was localized or generalized. Nonruptured appendicitis was generally indistinguishable from ruptured appendicitis preoperatively, by both duration and symptoms. Boys were found more likely to have appendicitis (with or without rupture) than girls (18/118 or 15%, vs. 6/128 or 5%, P less than 0.05). In conclusion, fever and vomiting were noted at presentation more frequently in children with appendicitis than in children with other causes of acute abdominal pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Diagnosing appendicitis in children with acute abdominal pain. 318 19
We reported a case of amoebic liver abscess (ALA) in a 6-year-old Malaysian boy who presented with fever,
lethargy
, diarrhoea and right hypochondriac pain. On admission he was diagnosed with perforated
acute appendicitis
and a laparotomy was done. After surgery he developed acute respiratory distress. Ultrasonography, chest X-Ray and CT scan revealed two ALAs in the posterior segment of right lobe of liver, pleural effusion and collapsed consolidation of lungs bilaterally. Percutaneous liver abscesses drainage was done and intravenous Metronidazole was started. PCR carried out on the pus from the abscess was positive for Entamoeba histolytica. Patient however succumbed to the infection one week after admission.
...
PMID:Fatal case of amoebic liver abscess in a child. 2652 7