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Query: UMLS:C0184567 (
acute pain
)
3,962
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cholesterol embolism after left heart catheterisation by the femoral approach was diagnosed in seven men (mean age 59.6 years) out of a total of 4587 catheterisations. Diabetes was present in four patients, systemic hypertension in three, and signs of extensive atherosclerosis in six; five patients were taking anticoagulant drugs.
Acute pain
in the legs or abdomen occurred in six patients, two of whom had abdominal angina; renal failure was present in six patients, cutaneous manifestations in five, and a cholesterol embolus was seen in the retina in one. Six out of six patients had an appreciable increase in the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and five out of five had eosinophilia within a week of catheterisation. Renal failure was progressive in five patients, one of whom required haemodialysis. Three patients required amputation of the toes because of
gangrene
. Four patients died within four and a half months of catheterisation from causes not directly related to cholesterol embolism. At necropsy cholesterol emboli were found in all four patients. Cholesterol embolism is a rare but serious complication of left heart catheterisation.
...
PMID:Cholesterol embolism as a complication of left heart catheterisation. Report of seven cases. 646 20
It is important that a routine search be done roentgenographically for intramural intestinal gas. Several different patterns may be present, but unfortunately, classification of the findings is not helpful in predicting either the cause, or the presence, of
gangrene
. Also, the clinical circumstances in which intramural intestinal gas is discovered are important--if seen in a patient with
acute pain
in the abdomen, panmural
gangrene
is nearly always present and early operation desirable. However, if first discovered in the early postoperative period, a more selective approach is possible. Although many of the patients with intramural intestinal gas died, approximately one-quarter will survive. Hopefully, more timely recognition of intramural intestinal gas will allow earlier surgical intervention in some patients with ischemia of the intestine.
...
PMID:Intramural intestinal gas in adults. 683 65
An 88-year-old female presented with
gangrene
of two toes of the left foot. Angiography revealed a calcified occlusion of the left popliteal artery, 8 cm in length. Recanalisation was performed and the occlusion was successfully dilated. On day 13 after the procedure, the patient experienced
acute pain
in the left popliteal fossa. Ultrasound revealed a large pseudo-aneurysm of the popliteal artery. Angiography not only confirmed this finding but showed rupture of this pseudo-aneurysm. An above-knee amputation was performed. Pseudo-aneurysm formation at the site of previous PTA is considered as a rare complication and has not been reported in the literature. The incidence of pseudo-aneurysm formation at a PTA site is unknown because it is not routinely detected. Predisposing general and local factors are discussed. The present case illustrates that pseudo-aneurysms can cause other major complications with disastrous consequences for the patient. Pseudo-aneurysms after previous PTA should be treated by conventional bypass surgery or by endovascular means. Further studies should be undertaken to evaluate the risk of pseudo-aneurysm formation after previous PTA and to define which patients should be monitored closely.
...
PMID:Ruptured pseudo-aneurysm of the popliteal artery after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. 1265 87
Although fibroids constitute the most common tumour in women of reproductive age, it is remarkable how very rarely they cause acute complications. However, when they do occur, the acute complications can cause significant morbidity (very occasionally, mortality), profoundly affecting a woman's quality of life. The complications include thrombo-embolism, acute torsion of subserosal pedunculated leiomyomata, acute urinary retention and renal failure,
acute pain
caused by red degeneration during pregnancy, acute vaginal or intra-peritoneal haemorrhage, mesenteric vein thrombosis and intestinal
gangrene
. The obstetrician will be most familiar with red degeneration and acute urinary retention, both of which tend to occur in association with pregnancy. It is difficult to quote an incidence rate for these acute complications as they are rare, and most are reported as cases or case series in the literature. The majority (except red degeneration, acute urinary retention and thrombo-embolism) presents as an acute abdomen and requires urgent exploratory surgery. The differential diagnosis would include twisted adnexa, ruptured ectopic pregnancy, haemorrhagic corpus luteum or follicular cyst, whilst that of the pelvic mass would be ovarian or endometrial carcinoma, uterine sarcoma or leiomyoma and, rarely, ovarian fibroma. Deep vein thrombosis is usually due to pelvic venous compression, and while some have advocated that its occurrence in association with a fibroid mass should be an absolute indication for hysterectomy, sophisticated use of radiological adjuncts at surgery, such as 'umbrellas' and haematological support with appropriate anticoagulation, could enable uterine-preserving surgery. The diagnosis of fibroids as a cause of acute urinary retention should be one of exclusion. The treatment of the acute fibroid in pregnancy is of course conservative, definitive treatment being postponed until postpartum.
...
PMID:Acute complications of fibroids. 1926 55
Acute pain
following amputation can be challenging to treat due to multiple underlying mechanisms and variable clinical responses to treatment. Furthermore, poorly controlled preoperative pain is a risk factor for developing chronic pain. Evidence suggests that epidural analgesia and peripheral nerve blockade may decrease the severity of residual limb pain and the prevalence of phantom pain after lower extremity amputation. We present the perioperative analgesic management of a patient with
gangrene
of the bilateral upper and lower extremities as a result of septic shock and prolonged vasopressor administration who underwent four-limb amputation in a single procedure. A multimodal analgesic regimen was utilized, including titration of preoperative opioid and neuropathic pain agents, perioperative intravenous, epidural and peripheral nerve catheter infusions, and postoperative oral medication titration. More than 8 months postoperatively, the patient has satisfactory pain control with no evidence for phantom limb pain. To our knowledge, there have been no publications to date concerning analgesic regimens in four-limb amputation.
...
PMID:Pain Management in Four-Limb Amputation: A Case Report. 2601 96