Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149520 (acute cholecystitis)
2,784 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Technetium-99m-pyridoxylideneglutamate (99mTc-PG) is a nontoxic radiopharmaceutical that was found to undergo rapid biliary excretion in normal humans. The biliary tree and gallbladder were seen within 10-15 min of injection and by 20 min marked accumulation of radioactivity was noted in the gallbladder and gastrointestinal tract. Of ten "control" volunteers, seven had normal 99mTc-PG-cholescintigrams. In the remaining three, the gallbladder was not visualized. Gallbladder disease was not excluded in these three subjects. Of 24 patients referred for investigation of right upper quadrant abdominal pain, 13 proved to have gallbladder disease. All seven patients with acute cholecystitis and one of four patients with chronic cholecystitis had nonvisualization of the gallbladder on the cholescintigram whereas five patients with chronic cholecystitis or cholesterolosis had normal cholescintigrams. Six of the eight patients with nonvisualization of the gallbladder on cholescintigram had contrast radiologic studies (oral cholecystogram or intravenous cholangiogram or both), and in all six, nonvisualization of the gallbladder was also reported on the contrast study. cholescintigraphy was found to be greatly inferior to contrast radiologic studies in the detection of gallbladder stones. Eleven patients had complete extrahepatic biliary obstruction and this diagnosis was correctly made in all 11 by the cholescintigram. Fourteen patients had incomplete extrahepatic biliary obstruction. The correct diagnosis was made on the cholescintigram in seven but in the remaining seven it was not possible to distinguish between incomplete extrahepatic biliary obstruction and hepatocellular disease. Malignant lesions (carcinomas of head of pancreas, gallbladder, common bile duct or ampulla of Vater) were the cause of obstruction in 10 of the 25 patients with complete or incomplete obstruction and the diagnosis of obstruction due to malignancy was correctly made in 8 of these 10 by means of a scintigraphic equivalent to Courvoisier's sing. Finally, 11 patients had hepatocellular disease and a nonspecific pattern consistent with either imcomplete biliary obstruction or hepatocellular disease was observed on the cholescintigram in all 11. The 99mTc-PG cholescintigram is suggested for a role complementary to that of contrast radiologic studies in the preoperative investigation of patients with possible surgical disease of the biliary tract. Contrast radiologic techniques are advocated as being more appropriate in the nonjaundiced patient with suspected gallbladder disease whereas the 99mTc-PG cholescintigram is advocated as being more appropriate in the patient with jaundice. The value of the 99mTc-PG cholescintigram lies in the confidence with which complete extrahepatic biliary obstruction can be diagnosed. The "scintigraphic Courvoisier's sign" seems a useful indicator of malignant obstruction.
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PMID:Technetium-99m-pyridoxylideneglutamate: a new hepatobiliary radiopharmaceutical. II. Clinical aspects. 117 49

Ten cases of xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis are presented, 5 women and 5 men, from a total of 439 cholecystectomies (2.2%). In 50% of cases the clinical course was consistent with acute cholecystitis; in 30%, gallbladder cancer was suspected preoperatively; and in 70% of cases cancer was suspected during surgery but intraoperative biopsies showed no malignancy. Definitive pathological findings included early carcinoma of the gallbladder in two patients, and a cholecystocolic fistula in one patient. A perforated gallbladder was found in one patient. The incidence of postoperative septic complications was 18.1%, a figure that doubles that of elective biliary surgery in our hospital.
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PMID:[Xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis]. 148 86

The initial 950 consecutive laparoscopic cholecystectomies performed in one city at four hospitals by 30 general surgeons are reported, covering a period from April 4, 1990 to April 3, 1991. There were two operative deaths (0.2%), three common bile duct lacerations (0.3%), two subhepatic abscesses, two bowel perforations, and three bile leaks, two requiring laparotomy. Seven episodes of bleeding occurred, of which five required laparotomy, but none involved a major vessel. Sixty-five procedures were converted to open (6.7%). The mean operative time was 85.4 min. Intraoperative cholangiography was adequately completed in 49.8% and not attempted in 30.3%. Thirteen patients (2.7%) were found to have common duct stones. The pathologic diagnoses were chronic cholecystitis in 784 patients (82.5%), acute cholecystitis in 145 (15.3%), and cancer of the gallbladder in one (0.1%). Hospital stays ranged from 4 h to 31 days (mean 49.5 h). This procedure can be learned and performed safely in a community setting.
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PMID:Laparoscopic cholecystectomy: an initial community experience. 148 94

Two cases of Richter's syndrome are reported (in a 62 and 64 years old man) consistent with the appearance of B cell lymphoma of high malignancy in the course of CLL (low malignancy B cell lymphoma). In one patient, after 8-, and in the other one--after 53 months since the diagnosis of CLL, there was rapid clinical deterioration with lymphadenopathy, hepato- splenomegaly, fever and progressive cachexia, anemia and thrombocytopenia and leukopenia, unrelated to treatment. Both patients died, 4 and 3 months respectively, since the appearance of these symptoms. In the first cases Richter's syndrome was diagnosed histopathologically from the autopsy material. In the liver, spleen, adrenals and bone marrow, in addition to the characteristic infiltrates of CLL (small lymphocytes) there were areas of large cell proliferation consistent with high malignancy lymphoma. In the other case, the infiltrates of large cell lymphoma were found in the gall bladder removed because of acute cholecystitis, and in the lymph node from the hepatic hilar area. Immunocytochemical studies performed on the biopsy material indicated that the neoplastic cells had markers of B lymphocytes and cytoplasmic IgM kappa, as lymphocytes of CLL. In patients with CLL, who display rapid clinical deterioration and general symptoms with cachexia, the possibility of Richter's syndrome should be considered, and appropriate morphological studies performed.
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PMID:[2 cases of Richter's syndrome]. 182 59

Various diagnostic imaging studies have been employed in the past year to evaluate the normal and abnormal biliary ductal system. Variations in the normal ductal drainage of the left lobe of the liver, in which the right lateral hepatic duct drained into the left hepatic duct, were studied because of the implications for the surgical resection of the left lobe. Choledochal cysts have been studied in adults using endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography to evaluate the abnormal junction between the common bile duct and pancreatic duct and the long dilated common channel. An ultrasound study indicated that children with choledochal cysts also may have intrahepatic duct dilatation. An increased incidence of malignancy has been noted in adults with choledochal cysts, and their appearance on ultrasound, CT, and cholangiography were described. Cystic fibrosis produces abnormalities of the biliary tree, extrahepatic strictures, and more interestingly, intrahepatic ductal dilatation and abnormal contour without strictures. The usefulness of the preoperative ultrasonographic evaluation of the biliary tract in Oriental cholangiohepatitis was stressed. Bile duct abnormalities in fascioliasis were also noted on CT scans. Patterns of abnormality in the CT appearance of the thickened, contrast-enhanced, extrahepatic bile ducts were elucidated. Focal concentric, focal excentric, diffuse concentric, and diffuse excentric ducts were seen with various forms of pancreatic disease, choledocholithiasis, and various forms of cholangitis. An enhanced, thick-walled duct indicates disease, but is a nonspecific finding. Chronic cholecystitis was found to produce false-positive cholescintigram results in patients with suspected acute cholecystitis, but only in those with severe degrees of chronic cholecystitis. The results of multicenter trials using extracorporeal biliary lithotripsy in the United States have been published. They are somewhat disappointing and do not confirm the original excellent results reported in Germany for treatment of gallbladder stones. Much interest has been focused on the use of expandable metallic stents for the treatment of benign and malignant biliary obstruction. Preliminary data suggest good patency rates for benign lesions. Patency rates for malignant lesions are similar to those of previously available plastic stents.
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PMID:Diagnostic and interventional procedures for the biliary tract. 185 80

From 1984 to 1989, 175 esophageal cancer patients, 10 patients admitted for severe caustic esophagitis, and 1 patient with pyothorax due to iatrogenic perforation of the esophagus underwent an esophageal resection or bypass operation. One hundred sixty-eight esophageal resections were performed on 167 patients; 13 were total, 106 subtotal and 49 distal. Nineteen digestive transplants were pulled up to the neck to bypass the esophagus or re-establish continuity after an esophagectomy made elsewhere. Digestive continuity was restored by a long gastric transplant in 120 patients, a colon segment in 17, a jejunal loop in 35, and a short gastric transplant after limited esophago-gastrectomy in 14 patients. Thirty day mortality was 0 in the whole group. Hospital mortality was 1.2% in the resection group and 10.5% in the bypass group (p = 0.048). Nonfatal postoperative complications consisted of respiratory distress in 33 patients, recurrent nerve palsy in 10, anastomotic fistula in 10 (cervical in 8 and intrathoracic in 2) and anastomotic stenosis in 18 patients. Respiratory complications were more frequent in patients with a cancer of the thoracic esophagus (29/111) than in those operated on for a cancer located in the esophago-gastric junction (4/50) (p less than 0.01). Anastomotic stenosis occurred more frequently in the neck (17/137) than in the chest (1/49) (p less than 0.05). Nine patients were reoperated on for a technical complication; intraabdominal hemorrhage (1), thoracic duct injury (2), acute cholecystitis (1), tight stricture of the esophageal anastomosis (2), jejuno-duodenal anastomotic fistula (2), or stridor related to recurrent nerve palsy (1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Esophageal resection and by-pass: a 6 year experience with a low postoperative mortality. 194 64

We reviewed the charts of the cancer patients admitted in a medical oncology ICU during an 11-month period. Among 330 admissions (55% for a medical complication, 45% for monitoring during administration of an intensive or potentially toxic treatment), 49 patients died and 34 autopsies were performed. Every autopsied case was reviewed by a group of oncologists and pathologists. The direct cause of death was neoplasia itself in only four patients. Six deaths remained unexplained after post mortem examination. In 23.5% of cases, the direct cause of death was a major infection (four aspergillosis, two candidemia, one CMV pneumonia, one acute cholecystitis). Overall, the clinical diagnosis of the immediate cause of death was correct in only 41% of the cases. Lesions of pulmonary edema (PE) were found at autopsy in 68% of the cases. No predictive factors for PE were determined.
Eur J Cancer 1990 Mar
PMID:Causes of deaths in an oncologic intensive care unit: a clinical and pathological study of 34 autopsies. 214 96

We studied the clinical records of 81 patients referred for endoscopic sphincterotomy in the period of June 1985 to December 1989, 54 were females and 27 males. Indication for the procedure were stones in the choledochus in 68 (84%) patients, malignant neoplasm that affected the biliary tree in 9 (11.1%), "sump syndrome" in 2 (2.5%), intrahepatic papillary stenosis and stones in 1 case, respectively. In 13 of the 81 patients the procedure was accompanied by treatment with the use of biliary prosthesis. We used the endoscopic sphincterotomy in 73 of the 81 (90.1%) patients, observing acute complications in 6.2% due to bleeding at the point of tubal insertion, pancreatitis, or acute cholecystitis. In 10 (76%) of 13 patients, in which the biliary prosthesis was used, the procedure was successful; in only one, acute cholangitis. There was no mortality associated with the procedure.
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PMID:[Endoscopic management in biliary problems. 4 years' experience]. 233 Apr 25

The concentration of the pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (PSTI) was measured in serum from 360 patients with acute abdominal diseases. Elevated levels were found in acute pancreatitis, cholangitis, choledocholithiasis, acute cholecystitis, pancreatic pseudocyst, malignancy, renal failure and in several different inflammatory conditions not connected with the pancreas. The results suggest the possibility of an extra-pancreatic production of PSTI, especially since the changes seen over time do not favour leakage or reabsorption as the cause of the high PSTI levels seen in acute pancreatitis. PSTI rather behaves as an acute phase reactant, as judged from the parallelism in the reaction pattern with antichymotrypsin.
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PMID:Serum levels of immunoreactive PSTI in acute abdominal disorders, with special reference to a possible extrapancreatic PSTI production. 243 67

Fiscal considerations prompted comparison of cefotaxime (a third generation cephalosporin) with cefamandole (a second generation cephalosporin) for prophylaxis in the surgical treatment of the biliary tract. One hundred and eight patients who underwent an operation upon the biliary tract received three 1 gram doses of cefotaxime (54 patients) or cefamandole (54 patients) at induction of anesthesia and then one and three hours later. The study was prospective, blinded and randomized. The groups (cefotaxime versus cefamandole) were statistically comparable for age, sex, diagnosis, type and duration of operation and positive cultures. The most prevalent bacteria isolated from qualitative aerobic and anaerobic cultures of bile and the wall of the gallbladder were Escherichia coli, Streptococcus and Klebsiella. The incidence of bactibilia in patients with one of these conditions was: 75 per cent for cancer; 69 per cent for patients more than 60 years old; 33 per cent for jaundice; 58 per cent for pancreatitis; 60 per cent for exploration of the common bile duct, and 22 per cent for acute cholecystitis. Microbiologic agar diffusion assays of tissue from the wall of the gallbladder, subcutaneous fat and rectus muscle and samples of bile and serum obtained 30 minutes after the second dose of antibiotic showed a statistically significant greater concentration of cefamandole in the wall of the gallbladder. Otherwise there was no difference between the concentration of cefamandole and cefotaxime. The groups showed no statistical difference for temperature of more than or equal to 38 degrees C. on two consecutive measurements, postoperative wound and urinary infections, postoperative hospital stay and days in the intensive care unit and incidence of readmission within a month. Prophylactic use of cefotaxime in a three dose regimen provided no advantage in prophylaxis compared with cefamandole.
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PMID:A comparison of cefotaxime versus cefamandole in prophylaxis for surgical treatment of the biliary tract. 310 45


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