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Query: UMLS:C0700208 (
scoliosis
)
8,574
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors report two healthy young patients with progressive idiopathic
scoliosis
, both without allergies or histories of gastrointestinal disorders, who received perioperative preventive cephalosporin antibiotics, and developed explosive
diarrhea
postoperatively, confirmed as Clostridium difficile pseudomembranous colitis by stool toxin assay. Both patients had initially recovered uneventfully after posterior fusion and Cotrel-Dubousset instrumentation. Their youth, health, diagnosis, and lack of nosocomial factors made colitis unexpected. The two cases were sporadic, occurring 2 years apart over a 12-year observation period. Symptoms and signs of colitis for the two patients were markedly varied as to time of onset, order of appearance, and severity. Unexplained fever before onset of
diarrhea
led to renewed cephalosporin administration, potentially exacerbating the colitis. Initial symptoms and signs were nonspecific; appropriate treatment had to begin before diagnosis could be confirmed by stool toxin asay, which requires 2 days.
...
PMID:Postoperative Clostridium difficile pseudomembranous colitis in idiopathic scoliosis. A brief clinical report. 830 65
Although the literature on infections transmitted via transfused blood focuses on viruses, Yersinia enterocolitica can also cause severe infections in patients receiving transfusions. A 13-year-old patient developed severe sepsis after an autologous blood transfusion contaminated with Y. enterocolitica. The patient was an otherwise healthy female undergoing posterior spinal fusion for congenital
scoliosis
. Prior to surgery, the patient donated blood for perioperative and postoperative use. A few days before the donation, she had complained of abdominal pain and was experiencing mild
diarrhea
. The patient received four units of packed red blood cells (PRBCs) during the surgery. Intraoperatively, the patient developed fever up to 103.6 degrees F, became hypotensive requiring epinephrine and dopamine, and developed metabolic acidosis with serum bicarbonate concentration dropping to 16 mmol/l. The surgery team believed the patient was experiencing malignant hyperthermia and attempted to cool patient during the procedure. Postoperatively, the patient was transferred to the pediatric intensive care unit and treated for severe shock of unknown etiology. The patient further developed disseminated intravascular coagulation. The patient received supportive care and was started on ampicillin/sulbactam on postoperative day (POD) one which was changed to clindamycin, ciprofloxacin and tobramycin on POD two when blood cultures grew gram-negative bacilli. On POD three, cultures were identified as Y. enterocolitica and antibiotics were changed to tobramycin and cefotaxime based on susceptibility data. Sequelae of the shock included adult respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation and a tracheostomy and multiple intracranial hemorrhagic infarcts with subsequent seizure disorder. Due to severe lower extremity ischemia, she required a bilateral below the knee amputation. The cultures of the snippets from the bags of blood transfused to the patient also grew Y. enterocolitica. This case illustrates the importance of considering transfusion related bacterial infections in patients receiving PRBCs. All patients in shock following any type of transfusion may require aggressive antibiotic therapy, until the diagnosis and etiology are known.
...
PMID:Yersinia septic shock following an autologous transfusion in a pediatric patient. 1262 Feb 65
A rare complication of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) is gastrocolocutaneous fistula which usually occurs after replacement of the PEG tube. As tube feeding is directly delivered to the transverse colon, patients typically present with a sudden onset of transient
diarrhea
within minutes after PEG tube feeding. A radiographic study using water-soluble contrast material via the PEG tube shows the tip of the tube in the transverse colon. We present here a patient who had this complication after PEG insertion. A PEG tube for enteral feeding was placed in a 27-year-old man with cerebral plasty and a severe
scoliosis
. After replacement of the PEG tube, he developed
diarrhea
after each PEG tube feeding. The diagnosis of gastrocolocutaneous fistula was made after injection of gastrografin from the PEG tube. Another gastrostomy tube was placed surgically and the fistula was then also excised. In conclusion, gastrocolocutaneous fistula must be considered as a complication of PEG tube placement when patients with a PEG tube develop a sudden onset of transient
diarrhea
immediately after PEG tube feeding.
...
PMID:A case of gastrocolocutaneous fistula as a complication of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. 1846 90
In a dairy farm in Lower Saxony, a male black and white German Holstein calf showed two partially fused heads,
scoliosis
of the thoracal vertebral column and a high-graded dyspnoea. The animal was sired by a bull used in artificial insemination. Further affected calves were not known at this farm. The radiographic examination of the animal verified the diagnosis of a dicephalus. The pathological-anatomical examination revealed a complex malformation of the heart similar to the human Eisenmenger-complex. Several environmental causes like intoxication, rectal palpation for gestation diagnosis, infections by bovine virus
diarrhoea
or infectious bovine rhinotracheitis viruses could be ruled out by anamnesis and virological examinations. Thus, we supposed a hereditary background for this defect.
...
PMID:[A rare occurrence of dicephalus, scoliosis and complex heart anomalies in a male black and white German Holstein calf]. 1935 Aug 10
Migration of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube to colon with gastro-colonic-cutaneous fistula formation is a rare complication of the procedure. Transient episodic
diarrhea
following each PEG tube feeding is typical of this complication. We present a 72-year-old man with cerebrovascular disease and
scoliosis
who encountered episodes of transient
diarrhea
after each PEG tube feeding. His
diarrhea
was refractory to medications. Colonoscopy demonstrated a mal-positioned PEG in the transverse colon. Computed tomogram (CT) of abdomen further confirmed the finding. After removal of the migrated PEG, his
diarrhea
had ceased completely. The gastro-colonic-cutaneous fistula was further managed with endoscopic clipping method with no complications encountered during follow up.
...
PMID:An unexpected cause of transient diarrhea. 2833 74