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Query: UMLS:C1510475 (
diverticular disease
)
2,138
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
215 colonsocopic examinations were performed on patients with rectal bleeding whose cause had not been determined by barium enema. The probable or definite source of the bleeding was diagnosed in 41% of cases. 13% had a carcinoma, 14% had one or more colonic polyps, 7% had previously unrecognised
inflammatory bowel disease
. The remainder had various other colonic conditions. The source of bleeding was twice as likely to be found by colonoscopy in patients presenting with frank rectal blood-loss as in those with occult blood. A carcinoma was found twice as often in those patients with
diverticular disease
as in those without this condition. A lesion was discovered in the majority of patients who had had two or more negative barium enemas. These results emphasise the importance of rectal bleeding as a symptom of colonic abnormality and the value of colonscopy in its investigation in patients where the results of radiology are negative.
...
PMID:Colonscopy for investigation of unexplained rectal bleeding. 7 9
Two hundred and thirty-nine patients underwent colonoscopy for unexplained rectal bleeding. Local anorectal conditions were excluded by digital and proctosigmoidoscopic examinations and results of barium studies were negative for all patients. A cause for bleeding was found in 95 patients. Thirty-nine had adenomatous polyps, 24 had unrecognised
inflammatory bowel disease
, and most importantly 23 (10% of series) had carcinomas. Forty patients had
diverticular disease
, but nine of them were found to have an adenomatous polyp and four a carcinoma. Colonoscopy can contribute positively to the investigation and treatment of unexplained rectal bleeding and may prevent unnecessary laparotomy.
...
PMID:Colonoscopy for unexplained rectal bleeding. 31 Jul 2
To detect and measure occult gastrointestinal bleeding, we have measured haemoglobin concentrations (by HemoQuant) in the clear fluid obtained after whole-gut lavage. In subjects with healthy gastrointestinal tracts, lavage-fluid haemoglobin concentrations were 0.5-5.1 mg/L, equivalent to daily blood loss of 0.1-1.1 mL. High concentrations were found for patients with colorectal cancer, severe
diverticular disease
, and rectal varices, in seven of sixteen patients with active
inflammatory bowel disease
, and in four patients with iron-deficiency anaemia thought to be due to gastrointestinal bleeding. In these four patients, estimated blood loss ranged from 2.6-24.5 mL per day. This method could have various research and clinical applications.
...
PMID:Haemoglobin in gut lavage fluid as a measure of gastrointestinal blood loss. 136 92
The purpose of this retrospective study is to define current indications and results of Hartmann's procedure (H). From 1978 to 1989, 86 H were performed, 52 (60%) as emergency surgery. Indications were: colo-rectal cancer (37): 15 complicated and 22 as an elective procedure,
diverticular disease
acute or complicated (24), ischemic colitis (10), volvulus of the pelvic colon (5),
inflammatory bowel disease
(4), colonic perforation (3), traumatic hematoma of the sigmoid mesocolon (1). Fourteen patients died after operation (mean age: 79). There was no death after elective H for cancer. Post-operative complications were numerous: pulmonary (25%), abdominal would sepsis or disruption (21%), rectal strump leakage (14%), the later being harmless due to the associated Mickulicz drainage. Seven patients were reoperated on for necrosis of the colonic stoma. Mean initial hospital stay was 31 days. Restoration of the gastrointestinal continuity was done in 27 cases (37% of the surviving patients, 76% of the diverticular diseases). The authors conclude that for complicated
diverticular disease
H procedure improves survival without preferable continuity. For cancer, H procedure is permanently compromising gastrointestinal in the elderly to hazardous low anastomosis, and to palliative abdomino-perineal resection.
...
PMID:[Hartmann's procedure. A retrospective study of 86 cases]. 144 49
The successful application of laparoscopic surgery to gallbladder disease and acute appendicitis has encouraged clinical investigators to develop this technology further in an attempt to manage other pathologic disorders of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. After gaining experience with various laparoscopic skills while performing clinical biliary tract surgery, appendectomy and then in a controlled animal laboratory, a pilot program for laparoscopic colonic surgery was initiated. Twenty patients with ages ranging from 43 to 88 years (mean age of 57 years) underwent laparoscope-assisted colon resection. In nine patients, a right hemicolectomy was performed and a sigmoid colectomy in eight. A low anterior resection, Hartman's procedure, and abdominal perineal resection were each performed in one patient. Indications for surgery were large villous adenomas or adenocarcinoma in 12,
diverticular disease
in 5, sigmoid endometrioma in 1, cecal volvulus in 1, and
inflammatory bowel disease
in 1. Eighty percent of patients were able to tolerate a liquid diet on the first postoperative day and 70% were discharged within 96 h eating a regular diet and having normal bowel movements. There were three operative complications: a 3 unit postoperative bleed managed without surgery, one patient developed marked edema of the rectosigmoid anastomosis requiring decompression with a rectal tube, and one individual with metastatic colon cancer was operated on for a mechanical small bowel obstruction 7 days after the initial laparoscopic surgery. Although laparoscope-assisted colonic surgery may still be considered a procedure in evolution, we feel that in time it has the potential to be as popular as laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
...
PMID:Minimally invasive colon resection (laparoscopic colectomy). 168 89
In a prospective blind evaluation of multiple colonic mucosal biopsy specimens, 45 clinically well defined patients with chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
(21 Crohn's disease and 24 ulcerative colitis) and 16 control subjects (seven normal subjects and nine patients with
diverticular disease
) were studied to identify reproducible histopathological features which could distinguish chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
(CIBD) from non-CIBD and Crohn's disease from ulcerative colitis. Using kappa statistics 16 of 41 histological features were sufficiently reproducible for further stepwise discriminant analysis to differentiate between CIBD and non-CIBD, and between Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Using the combination of three features (an increase of lymphocytes and plasma cells in the lamina propria, the presence of branching of crypts, and neutrophils in the crypt epithelium) we were able to distinguish CIBD from non-CIBD in 89% of the cases with high probability (p greater than 0.85). To separate Crohn's disease from ulcerative colitis three features (an excess of histiocytes in combination with a villous or irregular aspect of the mucosal surface and granulomas) had a high predictive value. Using these features 70% of Crohn's disease patients and 75% of ulcerative colitis patients were correctly classified with a high probability (p greater than 0.85). These findings indicate that the pathologist is dependent on the presence of only a few histological features for a reliable classification of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.
...
PMID:Histopathological evaluation of colonic mucosal biopsy specimens in chronic inflammatory bowel disease: diagnostic implications. 177 58
When all of the macroscopic and microscopic features of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are present, the correct diagnosis is usually made without difficulty. When some of the changes are absent, the accuracy of diagnosis is reduced. This review has outlined those diseases which feature some of these pathological changes and may masquerade as idiopathic chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
. Some of the pathological mimics are iatrogenic while other common diseases, such as bacterial infection, ischaemia, and
diverticulosis
may produce confusing histological appearances. The picture is complicated by the fact that many of these pathological imitators may themselves cause or predispose to chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
, or may complicate chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
. For example, drugs and infectious agents are recognisable causes of relapse in ulcerative colitis; Crohn's disease may cause diverticulitis in patients with
diverticulosis
; and lymphoma may complicate ulcerative colitis. It behooves all practising histopathologists to recognise these mimics of ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease to ensure appropriate management for patients with inflammatory pathology of the intestines.
...
PMID:Pathological mimics of chronic inflammatory bowel disease. 151 Jul 50
Redundant or polypoid mucosal folds were found in eight surgically resected sigmoid colons with
diverticular disease
. Grossly, they were either swellings of mucosal folds or larger, leaflike, smooth-surfaced polyps with broad bases arising from mucosal folds. The number of lesions ranged from one to 11, and when multiple they formed two rows between diverticula. Swollen mucosal folds showed submucosal and mucosal vascular congestion, scanty thrombi, edema, hemorrhage, and hemosiderin deposition. Some were markedly inflamed. Polypoid lesions also showed crypt elongation and fission, upgrowth of muscle from the muscularis mucosae, and hyperplastic-metaplastic change typical of mucosal prolapse. One polyp showed evidence of an inverted diverticulum. Two cases displayed diffuse mucosal inflammation resembling
inflammatory bowel disease
in the region of the polyps. We speculate that these lesions result from a combination of venous congestion and mucosal redundancy secondary to spastic contraction of the muscle coat.
...
PMID:Polypoid prolapsing mucosal folds in diverticular disease. 195 44
Patients with this pathology represents a difficult problem in differential diagnosis. Clinical findings and radiologic studies could help but endoscopy is now the most precise method in order to determine the site and nature of hemorrhage. We performed 504 colonoscopies in colon hemorrhage finding that our most frequent cause were polyps in both, children and adults in 199 cases (39%);
diverticular disease
was the second with 131 patients (26%) and third carcinoma with 52 (10%). Other causes were amebic colitis in 47 (8%);
inflammatory bowel disease
in 28 (6%) and infectious colitis in 13 (3%). Risks, complications and limitations of colonoscopy, as well as its great utility in diagnosis and treatment of colonic hemorrhagic lesions are commented.
...
PMID:[Colonoscopy in hemorrhagic lesions of the colon]. 210 16
39 missionaries working at 38 separate mission hospitals or clinics in Bangladesh. India, Nepal and Pakistan completed questionnaires about their clinical practice during the previous year, 1980. Data were collected about gastrointestinal disorders, including coeliac disease, tropical sprue, bloody diarrhoea, amoebiasis, typhoid, cholera,
inflammatory bowel disease
and
diverticular disease
. More than 386,000 out-patients and over 56,000 in-patients were treated with an estimated 12,272 cases of bloody diarrhoea, 7,310 of amoebiasis, 2,113 of typhoid and 872 cases of intestinal tuberculosis, 74 cases of
inflammatory bowel disease
were diagnosed, of which 56 were ulcerative colitis and the remainder were said to have Crohn's disease. Surgery was performed in 28 hospitals, but only 10 (26%) had a histology service.
Inflammatory bowel disease
appears to be a relatively more common cause of diarrhoea in the Indian subcontinent than in sub-Saharan Africa (z = 5.47, p less than 0.001). The proportion of patients with bloody diarrhoea who have ulcerative colitis Crohn's disease was similar throughout the region. The rate of cases having ulcerative colitis rather than Crohn's disease was greater in India (z = 3.1, p less than 0.005), and in Bangladesh (z = 3.2, p less than 0.005), than in Pakistan (z = 1.28, NS) or Nepal and Bhutan (z = 0, NS). The relative risk of Indians developing ulcerative colitis rather than Crohn's disease is 2.6 (95% confidence limits 1.4-4.8, NS). This may reflect diagnostic difficulties in distinguishing Crohn's disease from intestinal tuberculosis, but it may also shed light on similar differences now being reported in migrant groups in Western Europe.
...
PMID:Inflammatory bowel disease in the rural Indian subcontinent: a survey of patients attending mission hospitals. 229 48
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