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)

One hundred patients with suspected acute abdominal inflammation were imaged at 0.5, 2-3, 4-6, and 24 hours after the administration of Tc-99m HMPAO labeled autologous leukocytes. Scan findings were retrospectively compared with final diagnosis, serum C-reactive protein (CRP), and antibiotic treatment. Clinical findings were confirmed with surgery, barium enema, or sigmoidoscopy in 61 patients, and diagnosis was based only on clinical findings in 13 patients. In 26 patients, symptoms subsided before a final diagnosis was made. Tc-99m leukocyte images were positive in 45 of the 61 patients with a confirmed diagnosis, including all patients with acute cholecystitis (N = 4) and inflammatory bowel disease (N = 8). They were also positive in nineteen out of 25 patients who had acute colonic diverticulitis and in 6 out of 7 who had intra-abdominal abscesses. Abnormal activity was found in patients with colonic carcinoma, small bowel infarction, and acute appendicitis. Abnormal activity was visualized in 0.5-hour images in all but one of the positive cases. With the exception of two postoperative cases, malignant lymphoma, and a liver abscess, a CRP level of greater than 75 mg/L was associated with positive image findings. Antibiotic treatment did not affect imaging findings. Imaging with Tc-99m labeled leukocytes appears to be valuable for detecting and localizing abdominal inflammation, and three-phase imaging during the first 4-6 hours is recommended. In some cases, 24-hour images may be useful for distinguishing small bowel from large bowel inflammation.
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PMID:Tc-99m labeled leukocytes in imaging of patients with suspected acute abdominal inflammation. 220 80

The diagnosis of abdominal infections and inflammations often presents considerable difficulty, and various imaging techniques may be required to localize them accurately. At present, radiolabelled leucocytes offer the most widely accepted radionuclide method for imaging inflammation. Because of the many advantages of technetium-99m (99mTc) over indium-111 (111In), 99mTc-HMPAO-leucocyte scintigraphy is preferred for the investigation of acute abdominal sepsis and inflammatory bowel disease, and 111In-leucocyte scintigraphy for more chronic infections and renal sepsis. The 99mTc-HMPAO-labelled leucocytes technique is highly accurate within the first few hours postinjection, and is therefore useful also in acutely ill patients. It is sensitive in detecting abdominal abscesses in all locations except the liver and spleen. By whole body imaging, unsuspected sites and types of infection can be found. 99mTc-HMPAO-leucocyte scan is valuable also in the investigation of acute cholecystitis in problematic situations in which ultrasound is known to give misleading results, especially in acute acalculous cholecystitis. In inflammatory bowel disease it can reliably assess disease activity, but a normal scintigraphy does not exclude mild inflammation. Leucocyte scan is useful also in suspected acute appendicitis, acute diverticulitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, aortic graft infection, etc. But infection and inflammation cannot reliably be differentiated, which may cause misinterpretations in the early postoperative period. Radionuclide techniques have an important role to play in the investigation of abdominal sepsis if the nuclear medicine department can offer instant investigations when the clinical problem is acute.
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PMID:Investigation of suspected intra-abdominal sepsis: the contribution of nuclear medicine. 797 41

A 7-year-old, male, castrated, Labrador Retriever with a history of pancreatitis and inflammatory bowel disease presented for vomiting and anorexia. Serum biochemistry findings were indicative of cholestasis, hepatocellular insult, and decreased hepatic function. Ultrasound examination showed sediment and gas within the gallbladder, and a diagnosis of emphysematous cholecystitis was made. Emergency gallbladder resection was performed. Cytologic examination of bile fluid collected at surgery showed a mixed population of bacteria (bactibilia) together with fungal organisms consistent with Cyniclomyces guttulatus (previously known as Saccharomycopsis guttulatus). Similar fungal organisms were seen on a fecal smear. Bacteria cultured were normal gastrointestinal flora, supporting ascending infection; the fungal organisms were interpreted as incidental. Histopathology of the gallbladder indicated active (suppurative) and chronic (lymphocytic) cholecystitis and sections of liver tissue had evidence of chronic liver disease. A positive liver culture indicated concurrent bacterial hepatitis or cholangiohepatitis. Despite supportive care, the dog continued to decline and was euthanized 30 days later. Necropsy results confirmed end stage liver disease, but an initiating cause was not found. This case highlights the role of bactibilia in the development of acute cholecystitis and the unique cytologic appearance of C guttulatus as an incidental finding in bile fluid.
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PMID:Gallbladder aspirate from a dog. 1712 57