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)

A sixty-year-old man experienced successively over two years several episodes of circulatory collapse and meningeal hemorrhage, a myocardial infarction, an episode of ketoacidosis and a seizure before acute abdominal pain with fever related to the sudden, partial, necrosis of his tumor, led to the discovery of a pheochromocytoma. This observation exemplifies the multiple clinical aspects and diagnostic pitfalls of this secreting tumor. It underscores the misleading nature of normotensive pheochromocytomas.
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PMID:[Pheochromocytoma and its diagnostic pitfalls]. 632 Apr 24

A nationwide surveillance of mortality associated with sterilization led to the identification of the death of a woman who was using oral contraceptives (OCs) prior to operation and died as a result of mesenteric venous thrombosis after tubal sterilization. This case is reported as a reminder of the increased risk of postoperative thromboembolism associated with OC use and to suggest how this risk can be decreased. The patient was a healthy, 24-year-old, white woman with 2 living children. She did not smoke and had no history of thromboembolic disorders. She had been using OCs for several years and continued their use until the time of hospitalization for operation. The specific OC preparation she was using is unknown. The first 48 hours following the operation the patient did well except for some mild to moderate lower abdominal pain. On the 4th day, she developed severe, acute abdominal pain and suffered a cardiovascular collapse for which she required resuscitation. She was considered to be septic and dehydrated; thus, treatment with intravenous fluids and antibiotics was initiated. An echogram obtained on the 5th day after sterilization suggested the possibility of an abdominal mass on the right sight, and an exploratory laparotomy was performed. There was 2000 ml of clear fluid in the peritoneal cavity. The cecum and ascending colon were necrotic with thrombosis of the colic and ileocolic veins. The pelvis and the appendectomy stump appeared normal. A right hemicolectomy and resection of the distal ileum were performed followed by a primary side-to-side ilecolostomy. The patient's condition deteriorated after laparotomy despite vigorous management, and she died the next morning, 7 days after the sterilization operation. Significant findings at postmortem examinations were thrombosis of both the ileocolic vein and the superior mesenteric vein and inflammation in the area of colon adjacent to the anastomosis. The cause of death was determined to be endotoxic shock secondary to large bowel necrosis which resulted from thrombosis of the mesenteric veins. This patient was at increased risk for postoperative venous thrombosis because she continued to use OCs during the month before the operation. 2 carefully conducted case-control studies have shown that OCs increase by more than 3-fold the risk of postoperative thromboembolism. It is unclear how much the knowledge of this risk has altered preoperative management of women having elective operation in the U.S. At least 1 prospective study has found no difference in incidence of idiopathic deep venous thrombosis with increasing estrogen doses, but the risk of postoperative thromboembolism associated with OCs containing a lower estrogen content has not been studied.
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PMID:Oral contraceptives and postoperative venous thrombosis. 708 37

A Malamute was examined for acute abdominal pain and collapse. Radiographs of the abdomen showed a pneumoabdomen, and a lucent mass in the region of the liver. Abdominocentesis yielded an inflammatory exudate with bacteria compatible with a Bacillus or a Clostridium sp. A quadrate lobe torsion was found at postmortem.
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PMID:Liver torsion and associated bacterial peritonitis in a dog. 922 Jan 33

From 10th September 1998 till 5th June 1999, the Paediatric and Cardiothoracic Surgery Units of Sultanah Aminah Hospital Johor Bahru managed three children with lung collapse secondary to pneumonia. The dominant initial clinical presentation in all three cases was acute abdominal pain. Basal pneumonia was diagnosed in two cases post-operatively after surgical contributory causes were excluded intra-operatively. Thoracotomy, evacuation of infected debris and decortication of the collapsed lung was done in all three cases. In children presenting with acute abdominal pain, basal pneumonia should be considered as a possible contributory cause.
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PMID:Pneumonia presenting as acute abdomen in children: a report of three cases. 1122 Nov 69

Meckel's diverticulum is an uncommon cause of acute abdominal pain and small bowel obstruction in adults. We present a case of a 31-yr-old man with recurrent vomiting and abdominal pain in whom the diagnosis of Meckel's diverticulum was not suspected until CT of the abdomen revealed multiple fluid-filled, dilated loops of ileum with distal collapse after normal abdominal radiographs. We suggest that CT may be helpful when the diagnosis of Meckel's diverticulum is suspected.
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PMID:Meckel's diverticulum causing intestinal obstruction. 1177 61

Haemorrhage from ruptured uterine vessels is a rare but life-threatening complication during pregnancy. The high rate of mortality associated with this condition is correlated to the rapidity of haematoma formation. The dynamics of this event become particularly evident at the time of birth when the uterus requires one-fifth of the cardiac output. This high rate of flow emphasizes the possible fatal consequences of delayed therapeutical intervention. Information available on the aetiology and pathogenesis of such events is poor, especially if an involvement of cervical vessels or extraperitoneal (incomplete) rupture of the uterus can be excluded. Diagnosis and therapy are based on the classical clinical symptoms of acute abdominal pain-and-shock symptomatology. We report on a 31-year old patient after spontaneous delivery and initially uneventful puerperium. She had to be laparotomised on the third day post partum because of pain and haemoglobin deficiency. We found a large retroperitoneal (supralevatorial) haematoma caused by ruptured lateral branches of the left arteria uterina. The uterus was preserved after haematoma removal and revision and suture of the bleeding vessels. The case reported on shows that peripartal rupture of arterial uterine vessels may turn out to be clinically relevant only after a relatively long time (> 72 hours). Only four comparable cases have been reported in the literature, the course being different from that in all the other cases. In all the documented cases arterial uterine haemorrhages resulted in short-term acute aggravation of the symptomatology with severe abdominal pain, haemodynamic collapse and simultaneous haemoglobin deficit. The case under report in the present paper was at first clinically occult and eventually developed a pathology that had not been described before. Its specific significance lies in illustrating the need for re-evaluating such initially hidden cases while paying special attention to ruptured uterine vessels.
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PMID:[Rupture of the uterine artery after spontaneous delivery with unusual course in childbed]. 1209 27

Splenic artery aneurysm presented with rupture is an unusual and potentially deadly reason of intraperitoneal hemorrhage. There are a lot of pathogenetic hypothesis; timing according to disease severity and surgical choices aren't definitely codified authors present one patient with hemoperitoneum for ruptured splenic artery aneurysm affected by chronic lymphatic leukaemia too and review international literature; they underline pathogenesis, symptoms, preoperative investigations and therapy. Degeneration of the media, atherosclerotic changes and high blood flow due to pregnancy and portal hypertension could be the main pathogenetic factors. Ultrasonography is the first investigation we have to practice if we suspect hemoperitoneum. We can practice computed tomography and angiography too if cardiovascular condition are good. Rupture showing acute abdominal pain and cardiovascular collapse suggest strongly urgent operation. The choice of operation is determined by location of the aneurysm. When located in the distal third of the splenic artery, the aneurysm is resected with spleen; alternatively, when it is located in prossimal third we can perform conservative operation.
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PMID:[Intraperitoneal hemorrhage from rupture of an aneurysm of splenic artery: case report and literature review]. 1287 Feb 88

The aim of this study was to evaluate the anaesthetic assumption of responsibility of the surgery of the aneurism of under renal abdominal aorta. It was a retrospective study over two years (April 2005 - April 2007). Seven patients were operated, the mean age was 69,4 years. An operational pre evaluation was carried out among all patients including/understanding an interrogation, a clinical examination and a clinical assessment. All the patients profited from a general anaesthesia with controlled ventilation. Arterial hypertension (5 cases) was the independent factor of risk followed by the nicotinism (2 cases) with a patient at the stage of obstructive chronic broncho-pneumonopathy (BPCO). A patient was allowed in a table of rupture with acute abdominal pain and a cardiovascular collapse. Electrocardioscopic anomalies were noted among three patients with type of: HVD+ HBAG; HVG; HAG. A patient presented a hypertrophy cardiopathy with deterioration of the function of the VG and an important pulmonary arterial hypertension. A tensionnelle fall was found among three patients after induction with the midazolam. The aortic time of clampage varied between 20 and 120 mn with an average of 57, 6 mn. The incidents at the time of the clampage were: a bradycardia, a hypertensive push and a hypotension. No incident was observed at the time of the declampage. The blood losses per operational were estimated on average at 1000 ml and the numbers of transfusion by patient was on average of 4 pockets. The post operative issue was simple among 5 patients. A surgical recovery was necessary in front of a case of thrombosis of prosthesis. An oligoanurie, an acute respiratory insufficiency was found at the patient admitted in a table of rupture. The intermediate duration of stay threw 11 days. The maintenance of a homodynamic stability per and post operational remainder a good strategy to prevent the operational complications post.
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PMID:[Anesthesia and recovery of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery]. 1966 89

An 82-year-old man was transferred to our emergency department due to acute abdominal pain. He had undergone an endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm repair (EVAR) six years ago. An intravenous contrast-enhanced abdominal computed tomography revealed the rupture of the abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) with a large retroperitoneal hematoma. A Talent (Medtronic, Santa Rosa, CA, USA) modular bifurcated endoprosthesis had vertically collapsed approximately 7 cm after losing its infrarenal fixation. As a result, it led to the repressurization of the aneurysm sac and rupture. The patient was successfully treated by placing three Talent (Medtronic) aortic cuffs. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of endograft collapse that has manifested with aortic aneurysm rupture. Although they are gradually declining, considerable rates of complications create the 'Achilles' heel' of endovascular repair of AAAs. A lifelong follow-up strategy for patients treated for AAA with EVAR is essential for the early detection and treatment of complications of the procedure.
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PMID:Abdominal aortic endograft proximal collapse resulting in aortic aneurysm rupture. 2165 68