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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 case report of subacute, reversible ischemic colitis associated with use of oral contraceptives (OCs) is reported. A 19-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with chief complaints of abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and rectal bleeding of 2 days' duration. Past medical history and family history were noncontributory. The patient was receiving no medication other than
Norinyl
2 (2 mg of norethindrone and .1 mg of mestranol), which she had been taking for 6 months. 2 days before admission the patient had taken 100 mg of dimenhydrinate and 2 ExLax tablets (90 mg of phenolphthalein) for constipation. Colonic roentgenograms revealed impaired mesenteric circulation and bowel ischemia; OC-induced ischemic bowel disease was diagnosed. Patient symptoms subsided within 96 hours of discontinuing the OC and initiating supportive therapy (including intravenous fluid infusion, nasogastric suction, analgesics, and antiemetics). When a repeat barium enema was performed, it showed resolution of the ischemia. In a short review following the case report, these drugs were indicted in causation of colitis-like syndrome: amoxicillin, ampicillin, cephazolin, chloramphenicol, chlorpropamide, clindamycin, cloxacillin, cotrimoxasole, cyclophosphamide, digitalis, ergotamine tartrate, flucytosine, fluorouracil, gold salts, laxative and cathartic abuse, mercurous chloride, methyldopa, penicillin V, and tetracycline. Ischemic bowel disease secondary to OC use is a rare but important complication because of its significant morbidity and potential mortality, and because of the widespread use of the drugs. The case report emphasizes the need to consider the differential diagnosis of acute vascular insult with bowel ischemia when
acute abdominal pain
progressing to bloody diarrhea occurs in young women taking OCs.
...
PMID:Oral contraceptive-induced ischemic bowel disease. 48 72
A case of mesenteric vascular occlusion is detailed. The 30-year-old female had abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, and small bowel changes seen on x-ray. She had begun taking the oral contraceptive
Ovral
(.5 mg norgestrel, .05 mg ethinyl estradiol) 3 years prior to hospital admission. Symptoms began to disappear when her oral contraception was discontinued on the ninth hospital day. Over the next 5 days abdominal signs and symptons subsided progressively. A follow-up small bowel series showed complete disappearance of previous abnormalities. In the differential diagnosis of
acute abdominal pain
progressing to bloody diarrhea, especially in young women or oral therapy, acute vascular insult with small bowel ischemia must be considered.
...
PMID:Reversible mesenteric vascular occlusion associated with oral contraceptives. 470 Oct 37