Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (urolithiasis)
3,973 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The work shows the economical effect of concurrent surgery on the abdominal organs and organs of the retroperitoneal space undertaken in 404 patients whose ages ranged from 16 to 81. The time taken by the concurrent operations and the duration of treatment at the hospital were studied. In 63.1% of patients the concurrent operations lasted up to 3 hours. The duration of treatment was least in concurrent appendectomy (14.2 +/- 0.5 days) and longest on oncological patients (40.9 +/- 2.2 days). It is noted that the sum terms of treatment reduce, while in separate performance of the operations they are prolonged. The highest economy of finances is noted in urolithiasis, nephroptosis, acute appendicitis, hernias, and cholelithiasis. The national economic effect in the treatment of 404 patients at the clinic came to 60,471 rubles and 18 kopecks.
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PMID:[Combined operations as a method for increasing the capacity of a surgical clinic]. 144 85

Although the morbidity of porphyria is rare, the surgical and anesthetic managements of patients with porphyria should be prudent, for various stresses including surgery and anesthesia may cause occurrence or exacerbation of this disease, occasionally resulting in the mortal course. Several drugs such as barbiturate, diazepam, pentazocine, and pancuronium, which can be used during anesthesia or after operation, reportedly exacerbate the disease. Furthermore, the acute exacerbation of porphyria may be misdiagnosed as acute abdomen, ileus, acute appendicitis, cholelithiasis, urolithiasis, or ectopic pregnancy. The managements of patients with acute porphyria during anesthesia and after surgery are discussed along with the introduction of our case report. Since there is no definitive treatment of porphyria, the most important thing is to understand the disease and to prevent the acute exacerbation of the disease. When patients are suspected of porphyria or possible porphyria, careful management is required during anesthesia and after operation with selecting secure drugs against the disease.
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PMID:[Surgical and anesthetic managements of patients with porphyria]. 761 68

Use of diagnostic imaging studies for evaluation of pregnant patients with medical conditions not related to pregnancy poses a persistent and recurring dilemma. Although a theoretical risk of carcinogenesis exists, there are no known risks for development of congenital malformations or mental retardation in a fetus exposed to ionizing radiation at the levels typically used for diagnostic imaging. An understanding of the effects of ionizing radiation on the fetus at different gestational stages and the estimated exposure dose received by the fetus from various imaging modalities facilitates appropriate choices for diagnostic imaging of pregnant patients with nonobstetric conditions. Other aspects of imaging besides radiation (ie, contrast agents) also carry potential for fetal injury and must be taken into consideration. Imaging algorithms based on a review of the current literature have been developed for specific nonobstetric conditions: pulmonary embolism, acute appendicitis, urolithiasis, biliary disease, and trauma. Imaging modalities that do not use ionizing radiation (ie, ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging) are preferred for pregnant patients. If ionizing radiation is used, one must adhere to the principle of using a dose that is as low as reasonably achievable after a discussion of risks versus benefits with the patient.
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PMID:Imaging the pregnant patient for nonobstetric conditions: algorithms and radiation dose considerations. 1802 13

Situs inversus is a medical condition with transposition of the organs in chest and abdomen. The condition may cause misdiagnosis due to inverted location of the origin of acute abdominal pain in cases of e.g. acute appendicitis. In this case report, the condition was first found on a CT scan for urolithiasis. It was also visible on a previously performed X-ray of the patient's chest, where both the apex of the patient's heart and the apex of a jewelry heart were located to the patient's right side. If this is not a unique incident, we propose this finding to be named "goldsmith's sign".
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PMID:[Christmas article. When the hearth leads the way]. 3054 71

Acute appendicitis is one of the top differential diagnoses of right lower quadrant pain in the emergency department. There are many other conditions that may mimic appendicitis such as diverticulitis, colitis and gynecological conditions. We report a rare diagnosis of a patient who presents with characteristic clinical and laboratory features of appendicitis with severe sepsis, but later showed acute pyelonephritis of a malrotated right ectopic kidney on computer tomography. An ectopic kidney is very rare with an incidence of 1 in 3000. It is usually asymptomatic, although it may also associate with obstruction, infection and urolithiasis. This case report raises the importance of early recognition of the correct diagnosis using imaging in appropriate clinical settings, and prompt antibiotic treatment can avoid unnecessary surgical intervention, preserve renal function and prevent a life-threatening catastrophe.
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PMID:A rare presentation of an ectopic kidney with pyelonephritis mimicking appendicitis. 3176 50

Our purpose is to describe the ultrasound sign for a correct non-invasive diagnosis of omental infarction in children. From January 2014 to December 2018, a total of 234 children (109 boys and 125 girls, age range 3-15 y) with acute right-sided abdominal pain, admitted to our hospital with a presumptive diagnosis of acute appendicitis, were prospectively evaluated. In all patients, abdominal ultrasound was performed, and the omental fat was always evaluated. In 228 patients, the omental fat resulted to be normal or hyperechogenic, never tethered, and they results affected by other causes of abdominal pain different from omental infarction (such as appendicitis, pancreatitis, urolithiasis and others). In the remaining 6 children, we found a hyperechoic mass between the anterior abdominal wall and the ascending or transverse colon in the right abdomen quadrant, suggesting the diagnosis of omental infarction. This subhepatic mass was always tethered to the abdominal wall, motionless during respiratory excursions. We named this finding the "tethered fat sign." The diagnosis was confirmed with laparoscopy in 4 children. The other 2 children were treated with conservative therapy. In these 2 patients, a sonographic follow-up was performed, showing a progressive reduction in size of the right-sided hyperechoic mass. In conclusion, our study suggests that the presence of the "tethered fat sign" may be an accurate sonographic sign for non-invasive diagnosis of omental infarction in children.
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PMID:"Tethered Fat Sign": The Sonographic Sign of Omental Infarction. 3203 86