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)

Meckel's diverticulum occurs in 2% of the population and may present at any age. Its management, when found incidentally at laparotomy, remains controversial, particularly in the pediatric population. From 1970 to 1989, a Meckel's diverticulum was discovered in 164 children at laparotomy. There were 120 boys and 44 girls with a mean age of 5.2 years (range, 0 to 18 years). Forty-seven cases were asymptomatic, representing an incidental finding at laparotomy, 25 were resected, and ectopic gastric mucosa was present in 7 specimens (28%). Three postoperative deaths (6%) that were not related to the resection and 2 complications (4%) (postoperative leak and wound infection) occurred in this group. Of the 117 symptomatic patients, 49 (42%) presented with bowel obstruction, 45 (38%) had rectal bleeding, 16 (14%) had diverticulitis, and 7 (6%) had umbilical pathology. Volvulus (20) and intussusception (19) were the most common causes of obstruction. Predisposing factors for bowel obstruction were fibrous bands to umbilicus or mesentery (37%) and ectopic mucosa (35%). Severe painless rectal bleeding occurred in 45 patients, 30 of whom (67%) required blood transfusion. A nuclear medicine Meckel scan was positive in 32 of 37 patients (85%). Contrast studies were not diagnostic; colonoscopy and gastroscopy ruled out other causes of bleeding. Patients with diverticulitis (16) presented with acute abdominal pain compatible with appendicitis. In the symptomatic group, ectopic mucosa was present in 61% of the resected specimens. Gastric (88%), pancreatic (7%), and gastric with pancreatic (3%) were the most common ectopic tissue. Postoperative morbidity and mortality for symptomatic patients was 8.5% and 0%, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Meckel's diverticulum in children: a 20-year review. 181 59

Plain abdominal radiographs are rarely diagnostic when the patient presents with acute abdominal pain. Emergency physicians, therefore, should be aware of the appropriate indications and limitations of abdominal films in this setting and should be skilled in their interpretation to exclude the rare cases of pneumoperitoneum, pneumobilia, hepatic-portovenous gas, small and large bowel obstruction, toxic megacolon, volvulus and intramural gas.
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PMID:Emergency abdominal radiography. 191 51

Acute abdominal pain in the patient receiving oral anticoagulants poses a difficult diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. We describe two cases of peritonitis requiring laparotomy in anticoagulated patients, and review 49 similar case reports from the world literature. These patients were usually explored for signs of bowel obstruction. At operation, the intestine often appeared infarcted, but pathologic examination commonly revealed intramural hematomata. In contrast, we present microscopic evidence of hemorrhagic cecal infarction complicating oral anticoagulation therapy in one patient. Intramural intestinal hemorrhage is the most common cause of acute abdominal pain in the anticoagulated patient who undergoes laparotomy. In addition to intramural hemorrhage, 14 per cent of patients had coexistent volvulus, appendicitis, intestinal wall disruption or intestinal infarction. We conclude that anticoagulated patients with suspected intramural intestinal hemorrhage may have severe intraabdominal pathology requiring operation. Therefore, operation is mandatory for patients who fail to improve after a short course of expectant management.
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PMID:Management of the acute abdomen complicating oral anticoagulation therapy. 222 4

Gastric volvulus is a rare acute abdominal condition, especially in the pediatric field. We reported 2 cases of gastric volvulus presenting with acute abdominal pain, abdominal distension and vomiting. Both were found to be mesentero-axial type gastric volvulus on operation; one was associated with gastrosplenic and gastrocolic ligment laxacity, the other with left side diaphragmatic hernia. Both of them recovered uneventfully with no evidence of recurrence on follow up.
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PMID:[Gastric volvulus in childhood--report of two cases]. 222 9

Two horses were presented with lethargy, weight loss, anorexia, and swelling of the limbs and ventral body wall. One horse, a 12-month-old American Paso Fino colt, also had acute abdominal pain. The other horse, a seven-month-old Tennessee Walking Horse (TWH) filly passed diarrheic stools during the initial examination. Each horse had low serum protein, neutropenia, and a normal packed cell volume (3.2 g/dl, 1300 cells/ul, and 38%, respectively, for the colt, and 2.4 g/dl, 696 cells/ul, and 44%, respectively for the filly). After intravenously administering plasma, the colt's PCV dropped to 23%, and the filly's dropped to 30%. During exploratory surgery, 3.5 and 2.0 meters of thickened terminal small intestine were removed from the colt and filly respectively, and a jejunocecostomy performed. The results of histologic examination of resected intestine were consistent with a diagnosis of equine granulomatous enteritis (EGE). Both horses showed clinical improvement within two days after surgery. The colt developed a neutrophilia (20,500 cells/ul) within 24 hours of surgery. Serum protein concentrations remained stable and gradually elevated to normal or near normal values of 7.0 g/dl (colt) and 5.8 g/dl (filly) by two weeks. The colt was killed four months after surgery because of signs of abdominal pain. Postmortem examination revealed a small intestinal volvulus associated with an adhesion. The TWH filly remains clinically normal 13 months after surgery.
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PMID:Effect of intestinal resection on two juvenile horses with granulomatous enteritis. 236 25

The role of the barium enema in the evaluation of patients with acute abdominal pain is well established. It is utilized in the diagnosis and treatment of several suspected clinical entities, including appendicitis, diverticulitis, intussusception, and volvulus. There is another group of patients in whom a vague clinical presentation and an indeterminate bowel gas pattern fail to clarify the diagnosis. The role of the barium enema has been expanded as an early diagnostic aid in the evaluation of these patients. Based on abdominal film findings, three patient categories are presented, in whom the early use of a "judicious" barium enema may safely and quickly contribute to the preoperative definition of the underlying disease process, allowing for the correct mode of therapy to be undertaken.
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PMID:The expanded role of the barium enema in the evaluation of patients presenting with acute abdominal pain. 409 71

The origin of increased alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity in peritoneal fluid (PF) of horses with clinical signs of abdominal pain was investigated to determine the usefulness of measuring ALP in PF in the diagnosis of small intestinal injury. The ALP isoenzymes in PF from 10 clinically normal horses and from 50 horses with clinical signs of acute abdominal pain were analyzed for their sensitivities to inhibition by L-phenylalanine, L-homoarginine, and levamisole and to inactivation by heat (56 C, 15 minutes). The enzymes also were discriminated by their patterns of migration during polyacrylamide gel disc electrophoresis. Of 50 horses with colic, 20 had ALP activity in PF at least 3 times the upper limit of normal. Of these 20 horses, 10 had marked increases of ALP activity in PF ranging from 10 to 150 times the mean value of activity as determined in the 10 normal horses. In the 50 horses with colic, ALP values in serum were within the normal range. In 19 of the 20 sick horses, the ALP in PF had properties different from small intestinal ALP. Of the 10 PF samples with markedly increased ALP activity, 9 had a group of properties that were unique for granulocytic ALP. The clinical diagnoses for the 10 horses with markedly increased ALP activity in PF included thromboembolic colic (4 horses), colonic torsion (2 horses), small intestinal volvulus (2 horses), peritonitis (1 horse), and salmonellosis (1 horse). Properties of the enzyme in the 10 PF samples with moderately increased ALP activity were compatible with a granulocytic origin, but insufficient enzyme concentration precluded electrophoretic confirmation of the source. The PF from 1 horse had a mixture of ALP isoenzymes derived from granulocytes and small intestinal mucosa. Of the 50 horses with colic, 6 had severe small intestinal disease without increased ALP activity in PF. Apparently, increased ALP activity in PF cannot be used as a reliable indicator of small intestinal injury in horses, because the ALP is predominantly granulocytic in origin.
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PMID:Origin an importance of increased alkaline phosphatase activity in peritoneal fluids of horses with colic. 725 13

A case of acute gastric volvulus associated with eventration of the diaphragm in a previously well 6 year old child is reported. The child presented with acute abdominal pain, abdominal distension and vomiting. At operation, mesentero-axial type gastric volvulus was found, associated with laxity of the gastro-splenic, gastrohepatic and gastrocolic ligaments and eventration of the left hemidiaphragm. Rapid recovery followed surgery that included release of distension and fixation of the stomach to the anterior abdominal wall. There has been no evidence of recurrence on a 2 year follow-up.
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PMID:Acute mesentero-axial volvulus of the stomach in a child. 818 52

Cecal volvulus is a rare, but potentially fatal, cause of intestinal obstruction. As computed tomographic (CT) scanning is often the initial diagnostic test in patients with acute abdominal pain, we reiterate the importance of the "whirl sign" in diagnosing intestinal volvulus. We report the first description of the CT diagnosis of cecal volvulus.
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PMID:Cecal volvulus: the CT whirl sign. 850 96

A 2(1)/2-year-old child was admitted to hospital with acute abdominal pain and vomiting. A single large air-fluid level without additional bowel gas was seen on plain abdominal radiography. At laparotomy organoaxial volvulus of the stomach was found and partial gastric resection performed. A single bubble appearance may indicate gastric volvulus.
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PMID:Acute abdomen due to gastric volvulus: diagnostic value of a single plain radiograph. 857 42


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