Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0152169 (renal colic)
811 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seven cases of the Curtis-Fitz-Hugh syndrome diagnosed over a six month period are reviewed with particular reference to the widely ranging modes of presentation. All presented as acute surgical emergencies but unlike other series, right upper quadrant pain was the presenting symptom in only one case. Right upper quadrant pain nonetheless, featured to a variable extent in all cases, being relatively shortlived in three. Conditions mimicked included left renal colic, acute appendicitis, pulmonary embolism, acute cholecystitis, chronic cholecystitis and urinary tract infection. In five cases symptoms dated back to a difficult or complicated termination of pregnancy and in one case a hysterectomy had been performed twelve years previously at which time the patient had documented evidence of pelvic inflammation. Diagnosis was made laparoscopically and all symptoms responded satisfactorily to a four week course of tetracycline.
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PMID:Curtis-Fitz-Hugh syndrome: the new mimicking disease? 294 32

The clinical picture of acute cholecystitis complicated by jaundice has four main types: with the prevailing syndrome of inflammation of the gallbladder, of the pancreatic syndrome, of the cholangitis syndrome and of the profound pain syndrome by the type of renal colic. Echography is thought to be an informative preoperative method of diagnostics of the cause of jaundice, its significance being increased when combined with the percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (94.4%). The patients must be operated upon within 24-28 hours. The intervention volume must be adequate to the type of the injury independent of the patient's age and of the degree of concomitant diseases.
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PMID:[The characteristics of the clinical course and diagnosis of acute cholecystitis complicated by jaundice]. 896 96

MDCT has become a fundamental tool for determining the causes of acute abdomen. CT is considered the imaging technique of choice in the diagnostic workup of both localized and diffuse acute abdomen, except in patients in whom acute cholecystitis or acute gynecological disease is suspected and in children, adolescents, and pregnant patients, in whom ultrasonography is the imaging technique of choice. Plain-film X-ray examination has been relegated to the initial management of renal colic, suspected foreign bodies, and intestinal obstruction. One of the drawbacks of MDCT is its use of ionizing radiation, which makes it necessary to filter and direct the examinations as well as to ensure that the most appropriate protocols are used. For this reason, low dose protocols have been developed so that diagnostic studies can be performed with doses of radiation between 2 and 3 mSv; these are normally used in the diagnosis of renal colic and can also be used in selected patients with suspected appendicitis and acute diverticulitis.
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PMID:[Multidetector computed tomography in acute abdomen]. 2174 57

Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is a focused examination, which is performed and interpreted at the bedside by the treating physician answering a specific clinical question. It is currently utilized as an essential adjunct to physical examination in many medical specialties. Recent advances in technology have made POCUS machines portable, affordable, and could be used with minimal training even by nonradiologists. This review aims to cover the fundamental physics of POCUS and its applications for diagnosing the acute abdomen in the primary health care including the most common causes encountered by family physicians. These are acute appendicitis, acute cholecystitis, renal colic, ectopic pregnancy, acute diverticulitis, bowel obstruction, and abdominal aortic aneurysm. We hope to encourage primary care physicians to incorporate POCUS in their routine clinical practice. We also highlight challenges encountered when using POCUS in the primary health care including limited availability and the need for proper training. Furthermore, we review the POCUS results when performed by primary health-care physicians. Integrating POCUS in primary health care empowers primary health-care physicians to provide high-quality, safe, and cost-effective care to the patients.
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PMID:Point-of-care ultrasound for the acute abdomen in the primary health care. 3235 95