Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0740577 (acute abdominal pain)
1,982 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five patients with Kawasaki disease (mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome) are reported whose varied presentations included acute abdominal pain, peripheral arterial aneurysms, digital gangrene and sterile pyuria and whose presenting pathology ranged from hydrops of the gallbladder to enteric pseudo-obstruction. As the complications of the disease can usually be managed without resort to surgery, which is associated with a mortality rate of up to 25 per cent, the recognition of Kawasaki disease will prevent hazardous and unnecessary laparotomy.
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PMID:Surgical presentation of Kawasaki disease (mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome). 225 9

Two cases of rare urachal anomalies in the adult are described, including one acquired patent urachus and one giant urachal cyst. The presenting symptoms and signs included pyuria, fever, lower abdominal pain and palpable abdominal mass. The correct preoperative diagnosis was made after sonography. The clinical and radiographic features and magnetic resonance imaging are presented. Stone formation and the huge capacity of the urachal cyst are first reported. Excision of the urachal tract with resection of the bladder dome and cauterization of the cystic wall with stone removal were performed in that order. When a young adult presenting with a wet umbilicus, acute abdominal pain or a lower midline abdominal mass, the possibility of an infected urachal anomaly should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Urachal anomalies: acquired patent urachus and giant urachal cyst--2 cases report. 234 62

During a twelve-month period, 416 children with acute abdominal pain required emergency admission to Southampton General Hospital; 46% had operations. Appendicitis was the commonest organic cause of acute abdominal pain identified (31%). Constipation (9%) can present as acute abdominal pain simulating appendicitis. All children should have a urine sample examined microscopically and the finding of significant pyuria is suggestive, but not diagnostic, of a urinary tract infection (7%). Mesenteric adenitis, which can only be diagnosed with certainty at laparotomy, was less common (4%). Despite careful clinical assessment and follow up, 45% of children in this series remained undiagnosed. Sedation but not analgesia may assist in the diagnosis of the acute abdomen in children.
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PMID:Acute abdominal pain in children. 724 73

Acute lobar nephritis (ALN) is a focal interstitial bacterial infection of the renal parenchyma. ALN is described as a midpoint between an acute pyelonephritis and renal abscess. ALN is underdiagnosed in children due to both non-specific symptoms and negative urinalysis/bacteriuria laboratory findings. The gold standard for diagnosis of ALN is CT scanning, however MRI can be considered to avoid radiation exposure. Diagnosing ALN is relevant, because it requires prolonged antibiotic treatment. Insufficient antibiotic treatment could cause renal scarring and subsequent hypertension or renal failure. Outpatient follow-up is indicated to exclude congenital urogenital abnormalities. We describe two paediatric patients with acute abdominal pain and fever who were suspected to have appendicitis (appendix not visualised by ultrasonography), but eventually were diagnosed with ALN and a renal abscess (despite absence of pyuria). These reports serve to highlight the issues around the recognition and diagnosis of ALN in children, and the need for clinicians to be mindful of this condition.
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PMID:[A child with abdominal pain and fever: consider acute lobar nephritis - diagnostic considerations when the appendix is invisible on ultrasound]. 2960 Sep 27