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)

Three case histories of patients who were treated for gonococcal perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome) are reviewed. The incidence rate of this disease process is believed to be increasing, and a surgical consultation is often asked for in the evaluation of these individuals. The diagnosis of FHCS requires a high index of suspicion. However, if a patient has signs and symptoms of acute cholecystitis plus the recent onset of a purulent genitourinary infection, the diagnosis of FHCS is suggested. Confirmation of this diagnosis is obtained with the culturing of N. gonorrheae from urethral or cervical secretions. The clinical presentation may vary from a moderately symptomatic to an acutely ill individual. Most commonly there is an abrupt onset of sharp right upper quadrant pain. The finding of any degree of lower abdominal or pelvic tenderness in addition to the upper abdominal pain, should make one highly suspicious of pelvic inflammatory disease and concommitant FHCS. Although no deaths have been reported from this syndrome, it is important to make a prompt clinical diagnosis and commence appropriate antibiotic therapy. The currently recommended therapeutic regimen is procaine penicillin, 1,200,000 U, twice a day for 10 days.
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PMID:Gonococcal perihepatitis (the Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome): a diagnostic dilemma. 45 27

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

Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome has been defined as perihepatitis accompanying pelvic inflammatory disease caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis. In the acute phase, patients usually complain of severe right upper quadrant pain of sudden onset. The pain is sharp, pleuritic and most intense at the level of the right lower rib margin and thus it is frequently confused with acute cholecystitis or pleurisy. Definitive diagnosis of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome needs invasive procedures such as laparoscopy or laparotomy, but considering that Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome is a benign condition that can be cured by oral administration of appropriate antibiotics, noninvasive diagnosis is desirable. Recently, we have experienced two cases of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome in acute phase accompanied with sharp and pleuritic right upper quadrant pain. In one case, pelvic inflammatory disease was not definite, so at first we mistook it for acute cholecystitis and reactivation of chronic hepatitis B. In the other case, Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome followed the preceding, typical pelvic inflammatory disease. Both cases were diagnosed noninvasively and treated successfully by oral administration of antibiotics.
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PMID:[Two cases of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome in acute phase]. 1572 19