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

A 45-year-old woman was admitted in July, 1976 with an acute cholecystitis without jaundice. She had suffered from hepatic colic without fever, jaundice, diarrhea or allergic episodes for the past 8 years. The physical examination only revealed an elective pain on the cystic point. Laboratory data were unremarkable, except for a 12 percent eosinophils. The cholecystogram showed a cholelithiasis. The lithiasis was confirmed during the surgical operation and a fasciolasis was diagnosed after one and 10-12 parasites had been found into the cystic and common bile duct, respectively. A cholecistectomy and choledochoduodenostomy were performed. The patient was treated with 60 mg dehydroemetine during 10 days and 500 mg chloroquine during the other next 10 days. Eggs of Fasciola hepatica were found in the stool culture. The follow-up examinations 3 months and a year after surgery were completely normal. The national literature on this topic is reviewed and the clinical manifestations and therapy of this disease are commented on.
...
PMID:[Choledochal obstruction due to Fasciola hepatica (author's transl)]. 4 37

Two cases of amebic colitis that resulted in perforation of the colon, an ominous complication, are presented. The first was diagnosed preoperatively as acute ulcerative colitis with toxic megacolon, and the second as peritonitis complicating acute cholecystitis. In both instances the correct diagnosis was made after operation. The first patient recovered after colectomy and antiamebic therapy, but the second patient died in the early postoperative period, in septic shock. Amebic colitis occurs infrequently in the United States, and the diagnosis is rarely considered. In most cases an initial diagnosis of ulcerative or granulomatous colitis is made and the true diagnosis is recognized only after operation for colonic perforation or hepatic abscess. It is suggested that amebic colitis should be considered more frequently in cases of patients who have diarrhea. Stool examination for ova and parasites is often negative in amebic colitis. The IHA is usually positive in emebiasis, and should be performed early in casesof patients who have bloody diarrhea or other clinical symptons when amebiasis is suspected. Rectal biopsy is also a useful diagnostic approach, but failed to reveal amebae in one of our cases. Finally, it is suggested that operation be performed urgently when fulminating amebic colitis is not reversed by antiamebic therapy, when peritonitis occurs even with antiamebic treatment in progess, and for colonic perforation or toxic megacolon even when antiamebic therapy has not been indicated.
...
PMID:Perforation of the colon in unsuspected amebic colitis: report of two cases. 19 Dec 33

Complications of the initial 200 cases of laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) at the Cathay General Hospital within a period of 11 months were reviewed from video documents of the operations and clinical records. The major complication rate was 3.5%, including one common bile duct (CBD) injury (0.5%), three retained CBD stones (1.5%), one subphrenic fluid accumulation (0.5%), one liver abscess (0.5%) and one cystic duct stump bile leakage (0.5%). All major complications were cholecystectomy-related, and only one of the seven occurred in cases of acute cholecystitis. Age and sex were not related to its occurrence. The rate of minor complications ranged from 0.5% to 10%; they were: shoulder and back pain (10%), gall bladder perforation (10%), retained stones in the abdominal cavity (5%), transient nausea and diarrhea (5%), extension of umbilical port to a mini-laparotomy (3.5%), prolonged operation time > three hours (2%), subcutaneous emphysema (1.5%), wound infection (1.5%) and prolonged ileus (0.5%). The minor complications occurred largely in patients with acute cholecystitis. The complications occurred mostly during the early period of our study, indicating a learning period phenomenon. These could have been avoided if we had had a thorough knowledge of the potential complications and had strictly followed the principles of laparoscopic surgery. We conclude that LC is safe and the complication rate is not higher than that for open cholecystectomy. Most of the complications are preventable if LC is performed by qualified biliary surgeons following strict precautions.
...
PMID:Complications of laparoscopic cholecystectomy: an analysis of 200 cases. 136 18

Patients with radiolucent gallstones (diameter less than 1.5 cm) and functioning gallbladder were treated for 6-12 months with CDCA (38 patients, 12-15 mg/kg/day) or UDCA (78 patients randomly allocated to receive 5-6 or 10-12 mg/kg/day). Complete dissolutions and partial plus complete dissolutions were respectively 26 and 58% for CDCA, 14 and 58% for UDCA at the lower dose, and 29 and 71% for UDCA at the higher dose. Statistical analysis did not show any significant difference between the three different treatments. In patients with stones of 4-10 mm diameter treated with UDCA, complete dissolution occurred at the lower dose in 0 of 14 cases while complete dissolutions occurred at the higher dose in 5 of 18 cases, suggesting that the latter dose may be more effective (0.05 less than P less than 0.1). A highly significant correlation was demonstrated between gallstone size and number of dissolutions with both doses of UDCA. No side effects were observed with UDCA, while with CDCA diarrhea occurred in 28% and a transient increase in SGOT in a single patient. 1 patient on UDCA required emergency cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis. Dyspeptic and/or pain symptom-atology improved in 65 and 85% of the patients treated with CDCA and UDCA, respectively. No variations in the blood lipids were observed.
...
PMID:Treatment of radiolucent gallstones with CDCA or UDCA. A multicenter trial. 703 Aug 35

Among an initial series of 103 patients with selective vagotomy plus pyloroplasty for duodenal ulcer, 9 patients died of causes unrelated to ulcer and 7 were lost to follow-up without signs or symptoms of ulcer 8 to 15 years after operation; the remaining 87 patients were followed up for 12 to 17 years. Insulin testing revealed only one inadequate vagotomy in a patient who had a recurrence in the short term. Insulin tests were negative in 61 and negative or adequate in 6 other patients. Complete vagotomy reduced basal secretion effectively in the great majority of patients but not in a small minority. Three patients had antral hyperfunction with persistent hypersecretion despite complete vagotomy as indicated by two negative insulin tests in each patient. Inexplicably, only one of these patients had a stomal ulcer recurrence. Long-term follow-up revealed the development of gastric ulcer in one patient wit stasis from a pyloroplasty stenosed by angulation from adhesions. Three other patients, one with ulcer and two with hemorrhagic gastritis, developed gastric ulceration in the long term despite low acid output and negative insulin tests. Biliary reflux was demonstrated in two of these three patients and was probably the cause of gastric ulcer in the third. Pre- and postoperative cholecystograms in 66 patients showed the formation of gallstones in 4 patients after vagotomy. Another patient who did not undergo cholecystography developed acute cholecystitis from stone. This rate of gallstone formation was the normal expected rate and was not increased as in some series of total vagotomy. Dumping with and without associated diarrhea was the most frequent and troublesome sequela. Postvagotomy diarrhea did not occur. To prevent dumping, and also to decrease acid secretion more effectively, pyloroplasty was abandoned in favor of Maki's pyloruspreserving antrectomy to complement selective vagotomy in 1968.
...
PMID:Long-term results of selective vagotomy plus pyloroplasty. 12 to 17 year follow-up. 746 6

Gallbladder stones remain asymptomatic over a long period. The biliary colic is the typical pain caused by these stones. Dyspeptic symptoms seem to be unrelated to the presence of gallstones. Acute cholecystitis, a serious complication of gallstone disease, spans a wide spectrum of clinical findings. The typical signs are right upper abdominal pain and tenderness, fever, leucocytosis and Murphy's sign. 35% of patients experience gallbladder empyema or perforation. Localized gallbladder perforation, characterized by high fever, severe right upper abdominal pain and tenderness and a palpable mass is often difficult to distinguish from acute cholecystitis. Free perforation into the abdominal cavity causes diffuse peritonitis. Gallbladder perforation into the lumen of an adjacent organ produces fistulas, mostly with minimal symptoms or a pain relief after decompression of the inflamed gallbladder. Air in the bile ducts and on some occasions bile-acid-induced diarrhea may result. Rarely, the perforation of large stones leads to an occlusion of the GI tract and results in a gallstone ileus. Common bile duct stones may be asymptomatic or cause bile duct obstruction with biliary colics and jaundice. Acute bacterial cholangitis characterized by Charcot's triad (pain, jaundice and fever) and the acute biliary pancreatitis with its typical symptoms are the serious complications of common bile duct stones, associated with a high mortality rate. The clinical manifestations of a gallstone disease and its complications reveal important diagnostic features, but the most important diagnostic features, modalities are the imaging procedures. They are decisive for an accurate therapy.
...
PMID:[Clinical manifestations of cholelithiasis and its complications]. 776 32

Patients are often referred for evaluation of a wide range of GI complaints including dysphagia, abdominal pain, bloating, nausea, constipation or diarrhoea. Many are diagnosed with 'functional' disease when endoscopy or conventional radiological studies fail to identify an anatomic cause for the patient's symptoms. In such cases nuclear medicine offers non-invasive methods for objectively demonstrating disease involving different areas of the gastrointestinal tract. Increasingly scintigraphy is playing a primary role in the evaluation of patients with suspected acute cholecystitis, active gastrointestinal bleeding, gastroparesis, and small and large bowel motility disorders. In addition, it supplements other studies when results are inconclusive in diagnosing oesophageal dysmotility, gastro-oesophageal reflux, acalculous cholecystitis, and postoperative complications of gastrointestinal surgery.
...
PMID:Current applicability of scintigraphic methods in gastroenterology. 777 16

A 50-year-old man with sudden onset of nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea was on ultrasonography of the upper abdomen found to have an adrenal tumour, 5.5 cm in diameter. This was excised transperitoneally with its connective-tissue pseudocapsule, there being no enlarged regional lymph nodes or other pathological findings. But the histological diagnosis was haemangiosarcoma of the adrenal. Seven months later the patient was re-admitted because of suspected acute cholecystitis. Emergency laparotomy revealed a gangrenous, stone-free gallbladder without abscess. Further exploration was not possible because of inflammatory changes and marked adhesions. Recurrent vomiting postoperatively indicated endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography and computed tomography, which showed a space-occupying lesion in the right adrenal region with compression of the choledochal duct, lesser gastric curvature and duodenum. At re-laparotomy tumour recurrence was found with histologically proven intraluminal metastases of the haemangiosarcoma in the jejunum. As curative resection was not possible, a palliative gastrojejunostomy was performed. The patient died 9 months after the diagnosis had been made from the advanced malignancy. This case of a rapidly fatal very rare malignant adrenal tumour underlines the need to remove all hormone-active asymptomatic adrenal tumours 4 cm in diameter or larger.
...
PMID:[Primary hemangiosarcoma as a rare form of an incidentally discovered mass of the adrenal glands]. 831 50

Acute abdominal pain is a frequent diagnostic and therapeutic challenge in hematologic patients. We report on the very rare case of organ endometriosis with acute abdominal symptoms in a 43-year-old female patient with AML-M5, starting 4 days after induction chemotherapy with idarubicin, ara-C, and etoposide. The patient presented with an acute abdomen with clinical findings of acute cholecystitis, subileus, and local pain in the right upper abdomen accompanied by severe diarrhea. Probably due to impaired intestinal resorption, menstrual bleeding occurred despite regular administration of lynestrenol. Ultrasound examination of the abdomen disclosed a tumor with poor echoes in the pouch of Douglas, a subcapsular splenic hemorrhage, and a thickened gallbladder wall with surrounding edema. A cystic adnex tumor was confirmed by endovaginal ultrasound. Based on history and the findings on ultrasound, an endometriosis was diagnosed, and the LHRH agonist (nafarelin) was administered nasally in combination with lynestrenol. Following this medication the abdominal pain ceased, supporting the diagnosis of endometriosis. Nasal administration of an LHRH agonist in the following cycles of chemotherapy was effective in preventing further abdominal discomfort and vaginal bleeding. LHRH agonists should be given to patients with known endometriosis before starting myeloablative chemotherapy to prevent painful hemorrhage from endometriosis.
...
PMID:Acute abdomen due to endometriosis as a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge in the treatment of acute myelocytic leukemia. 903 12

The first case of septicemic acute acalculous cholecystitis caused by non-O1 Vibrio cholerae is described in a healthy traveler, and biliary tract infections from V. cholerae are reviewed. Immediately after a vacation in Cancun, Mexico, a 55-year-old man developed acute cholecystitis. Blood and bile cultures grew non-O1 V. cholerae. At surgery, the gallbladder was acalculous, inflamed, distended, and nearly ruptured. Pathogenetic factors may have included diarrhea prophylaxis with bismuth subsalicylate, distension of the gallbladder from illness-induced fasting, and bacterial toxins in the gallbladder. The patient received i.v. cephapirin, followed by oral cephradine for a total of 10 days, and he made a quick and complete recovery. V. cholerae should be considered in the differential diagnosis of persons from endemic areas who present with cholecystitis or acute jaundice.
...
PMID:Acalculous cholecystitis and septicemia caused by non-O1 Vibrio cholerae: first reported case and review of biliary infections with Vibrio cholerae. 957 25


1 2 Next >>