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

A 42-year-old man was admitted to another hospital complaining of acute abdominal pain that was induced by eating. Abdominal computed tomography and selective angiography revealed an intimal flap separating true and false lumens that was located 3 cm from the origin of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA). Emergency surgery was performed because of the sudden recurrence of diffuse abdominal pain after eating and abdominal aorta-SMA bypass grafting was done using a radial artery graft. Postoperative angiography revealed that the graft showed good patency. The postoperative course was uneventful and abdominal pain no longer occurred after eating. This excellent result was achieved by early diagnosis using CT scanning and angiography plus an aggressive surgical repair with a radial artery bypass graft for isolated dissection of the superior mesenteric artery.
...
PMID:Spontaneous and isolated dissection of the main trunk of the superior mesenteric artery. 1247 90

A 42-year-old Japanese man who had undergone amputation of the left leg below the knee because of Buerger disease required emergency thrombectomy 7 months later. He complained of acute abdominal pain after thrombectomy. At aortography the distal superior mesenteric artery and its branches were not well visualized. Emergency laparotomy was performed because of suspected intestinal ischemia, and the terminal ileum and cecum and part of the ascending colon were resected. In total, the patient underwent laparotomy four times. Histopathologic findings revealed that the arteries and veins of the resected small intestine were occluded with organized thrombi. Inflammatory cell infiltration was recognized mainly in the intima. These findings are compatible with Buerger disease.
...
PMID:Ischemic intestinal involvement in a patient with Buerger disease: case report and literature review. 1476 Aug 32

A 42-year-old pregnant (22 weeks) woman with a history of peptic ulcer 20 years earlier, was presented to our gynaecological clinic with acute abdominal pain in 2005. She was para-1, had delivered a healthy child two years earlier and now she had an uncomplicated pregnancy. Upon admittance she was pale, hyperventilating and complained of epigastric pain and nausea. There was no vaginal bleeding and no uterine contractions. Ultrasound examination revealed a single fetus with normal cardiac activity. During the examination blood pressure suddenly dropped and the patient was considered to be in a state of pre-shock. Intraabdominal hemorrhage was suspected and she underwent immediate exploratory laparotomy. Uterine rupture with an intact gestational sac extruding through the laceration in the middle of the fundal region of the uterus was found. A sub-total hysterectomy was performed. The physio-pathology leading to the uterine rupture is discussed. An interstitial pregnancy close to the ostium internum (cornual pregnancy) may have lead to the thinning and rupture of the uterine wall in the fundal part. Alternatively, the placenta's location in the upper uterine cavity (possibly caused by a 3 cm myoma that seemed to divide the uterine cavity into two compartments) may have caused thinning and rupture of the uterine wall in the fundal part. The literature describing uterine rupture in the second trimester is reviewed.
...
PMID:[A woman in the second trimester of pregnancy with acute abdominal pain]. 1892 2

A 42-year-old woman came to the emergency department with acute abdominal pain. CT-scan showed an isolated dissection of the A. mesenterica superior and signs of ischaemic colitis. The patient was treated with endovascular stent placement in the artery and partial small bowel resection.
...
PMID:[A woman with acute upper abdominal pain]. 2177 73