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Query: UMLS:C1510475 (diverticular disease)
2,138 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Interest in imported tropical diseases has increased with the rising number of travellers to the tropics. This is especially true in the case of tropical gastroenterologic disorders. The causative organisms of chronic diarrhoea are different from those causing acute diarrhoea. Bacteria are relatively unusual; parasites, e.g. Entamoeba histolytica or Giardia lamblia or an opportunistic parasitic infestation associated with an HIV infection are more likely. Furthermore, non-infectious causes, such as postinfective tropical malabsorption, lactase deficiency or coeliac disease have to be considered. Today, elderly people often undertake a journey to the tropics; in these cases the diarrhoea may be associated not only with an increased susceptibility to tropical bowel infections but also with causes previously present, such as diverticulosis, carcinoma or inflammatory bowel disease. The classification of chronic diarrhoea following a visit to the tropics is essentially the same as that for acute diarrhoea: diarrhoea with and without fever and with and without blood. In addition, malabsorption is an important feature of chronic diarrhoea.
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PMID:'The tropics in our bathroom': chronic diarrhoea after return from the tropics. 857 32

In recent years, many health claims have been made about dietary and supplemental fiber. However, some reports (eg, those regarding oat bran) have been controversial. A review of scientifically rigorous studies shows that fiber has some preventive or therapeutic benefits in irritable bowel syndrome, diverticulosis, colorectal cancer, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia. However, it appears to have no direct benefit in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, gallstones, or obesity. The United States has one of the lowest per capita intakes of fiber in the world. Therefore, increasing daily fiber intake either through diet or with supplements is recommended for most Americans. Consumer interest groups should lobby for more fiber-enriched foods. The challenge for education and healthcare professionals alike is to remold the nation's interest in and understanding of dietary fiber.
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PMID:Benefits of dietary fiber. Myth or medicine? 863 64

Over a 4-year period, a direct-access fibreoptic sigmoidoscopy service was evaluated prospectively. In all, 756 patients were referred (median age 58 years, range 18-91 years). The principal indications were rectal bleeding (45%) or change of bowel habit (28%); both features were present in 13%. Abnormalities were present in 68% of examinations. Major disease was identified in 22% (carcinoma 7.0%, adenoma 6.3%, inflammatory bowel disease 8.3%) and minor disease in 53% (haemorrhoids 36.8%, severe diverticular disease 10.9%, non-adenomatous polyp 3.4%, perianal disease 1.4%). In patients under 40 years of age, major disease was rare (one carcinoma, three adenomas). Of the patients, 21% underwent barium enema for incomplete examination or suspected additional disease. No additional major disease was identified, but one carcinoma found in a patient with stricture. These data show that a direct-access fibreoptic sigmoidoscopy service produces a high diagnostic yield and may be of value to both patients and general practitioners in expediting a clinical colorectal service.
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PMID:Four-year evaluation of a direct-access fibreoptic sigmoidoscopy service. 871 66

An increasing number of case reports and controlled trials have drawn attention to NSAID-induced side effects in the lower gastrointestinal tract. In this review we also report 9 cases of colonic ulcers and 7 cases of diaphragm disease of the ascending colon, most of them associated with the long-term intake of slow release diclofenac. NSAIDs not only can exacerbate preexisting conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease or diverticular disease, but may also induce de novo enteropathy, colitis, collagenous colitis ulcers and strictures. Complications such as bleeding, perforation or bowel obstruction may require surgery. From the literature and our own experience we conclude that the use of slow release formulations has shifted the toxicity of NSAIDs from the upper to the lower gastrointestinal tract. This must be considered in differential diagnosis and checked by endoscopy if appropriate.
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PMID:[Nonsteroidal antirheumatic drugs and acetylsalicylic acid: adverse effects distal to the duodenum]. 866 76

Obstructive colitis is an ulcero-inflammatory and necrotizing condition that occurs in the colon proximal to benign or malignant stenosing lesions. it is the result of ischemia due to impairment of blood supply secondary to elevation of the endoluminal pressure, distension of the colonic wall and other factors which impair adequate perfusion. The incidence among patients with colonic obstruction is reported at between 1 and 7%. Of 50 patients with this condition in this series, 30 female and 20 male, 2/3rds were well over 70 yrs of age. Obstruction was most common in the rectosigmoid. In half the patients this was due to adenocarcinoma, 24 were due to benign obstruction and 15 were caused by diverticular disease. Type, extent and depth of ischemic lesions were highly variable and comprised early mucosal hemorrhage and edema, ulcero-hemorrhagic lesions and transmural necrosis. There was always an abrupt transition between affected and normal bowel. A segment of preserved mucosa was usually present on the proximal side of the stenosis. In 16 patients massive dilatation with stretching and thinning of the bowel wall, associated with a blow-out type of perforation or with transmural necrosis, was observed and was considered to have resulted from a rapid rise of endoluminal pressure to high levels. The microscopic and macroscopic features are described in detail and histological factors discussed in relation to the pathological lesions encountered. Emphasis is placed upon the range of appearances and similarities are shared with other inflammatory colonic diseases, particularly idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease. The importance of recognition of this disease entity, not only by pathologists but by surgeons dealing with the disease at operation, is stressed.
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PMID:Obstructive colitis: an analysis of 50 cases and a review of the literature. 877 Nov 49

Over a 12-year period, 67 patients presented with a vesico-colic fistula. The mean age was 69 years (range 19-96 years), with symptoms predominantly referred to the urinary tract. Cystoscopy and barium enema confirmed the presence of a fistula in 60 and 44% of patients respectively. A computerized tomography (CT) scan, used in only seven patients, revealed the fistula in each case. The underlying pathology included diverticular disease (62%), carcinoma (27%) and inflammatory bowel disease (6%). Fifty-one patients proceeded to surgery, of whom 32 (63%) had a sigmoid/recto sigmoid resection with primary anastomosis, and 13 (25%) a Hartmann's procedure. A diverting colostomy alone was employed to palliate cases of widespread carcinoma. No patient subsequently had the Hartmann's reversed. In addition to colonic resection, 48 (92%) patients had a simultaneous bladder procedure, varying from simple oversew in 32 (70%) patients to cystectomy and ileal conduit in three (6%). Wedge excision with primary bladder closure was practised in 12 (24%). Fistula recurrence occurred in seven (14%) patients, and the 30-day mortality was 10%. Surgery for vesico-colic fistula has an appreciable morbidity and mortality, yet if offers the only hope of achieving permanent symptomatic control.
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PMID:Vesico-colic fistulae in the Grampian region: presentation, assessment, management and outcome. 919 12

Recurrent abdominal symptoms following resection for diverticular disease occur in 1-10% of patients. Not all of these patients have recurrent diverticulitis. Other conditions such as carcinoma, irritable bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease and ischaemic colitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis. A thorough investigation including computerized tomography (CT) scanning, contrast studies and colonoscopy must be undertaken. The cause of recurrent diverticulitis may be the result of inadequate previous resection or progression of disease. Re-resection has been required in 0-3.1% of patients in a collected series. Re-resection may be technically demanding although permanent colostomy is usually not necessary. The best method of prevention is adequate initial resection.
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PMID:Management of post-operative recurrent diverticulitis: a review of the literature. 919 13

The following article contains a short review on gastrointestinal problems of the elderly. The diseases of the esophagus occurring in the elderly are not much different from those in younger patients. Clinically relevant in the stomach are above all bleeding ulcerations and the gastric carcinoma occurring more frequently in advanced age. The pyogenic liver abscess is diagnosed primarily in the elderly and is at a rule the consequence of an infection of the gall bladder and other abdominal sites. The hepatocellular carcinoma does not grow rapidly in the elderly, but its accompanying unfavourable survival rate at five years is also approximately 5 per cent. In the case of symptomatic cholelithiasis, older high risk patients do especially profit from minimally invasive laparoscopic surgical procedures. Today, bile duct calculi are preferably treated by endoscopic papillotomy and following extraction of the calculi. The pancreas is subjected to atrophy, lipomatosis and fibrosis at the advanced age. However, these changes are rarely of clinical relevance. A frequent problem in clinical practice is that of constipation, from which 35% of patients suffer above the age of 65 years. Another typical symptom of the elderly is the incontinence, the different causes are being discussed. In advanced age, gastrointestinal hemorrhages are mostly occurring above the Treitz's ligament. Hemorrhages of the lower gastrointestinal tract occur mostly in the form of diverticle bleedings and those of angiodysplasias in the elderly. The diverticulosis is also a disease observed in over 50 per cent of patients above 70 years, but it is symptomatic in only part of the patients. When suspecting an inflammatory bowel disease in the elderly, the possibility of a mesenterial ischemia must always be considered as differential diagnosis. The classical chronic inflammatory bowel diseases can, however, also occur at advanced age. The colon carcinoma is one of the most frequent lethal causes in the Western countries 90 per cent of the cases of colon carcinoma are found in patients older than 50 years of age. Intensive attention is therefore required in this age group.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal problems in elderly patients]. 933 52

With the objective of exploring the association between breakfast and minor anal complaints, an age, sex and pregnancy matched case-control study was carried out in the out-patient clinics at Birmingham Heartlands Hospital. Patients were selected after personal interviews using a structured questionnaire in out-patient clinics. Information on age, sex, occupation and breakfast habits, as well as on haemorrhoids and anal fissure, was obtained. Patients who had haemorrhoids or anal fissure were placed in the case group; the remainder were controls. Any patient with diverticulosis, inflammatory bowel disease, colon cancer or bowel resection for any reason was excluded from the study. The main outcome measures were the odds of developing haemorrhoids or fissure in patients who did not eat breakfast. The results are based on 47 cases that were age, sex and pregnancy matched. Of the case group, 36% did not eat breakfast, compared with 11% in the control group. The analysis demonstrated a 7.5-fold increase in the odds of suffering from haemorrhoids or anal fissures in matched subjects who did not eat breakfast, with a very high level of significance (P = 0.0036). This indicates that there is a very strong association between failure to eat breakfast and haemorrhoids or anal fissure. It is anticipated that educating the public to eat breakfast would lead to a long-term fall in the incidence of anal complaints, in the attendant morbidity for the patients and in the cost to the health service.
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PMID:The effect of breakfast on minor anal complaints: a matched case-control study. 935 68

The OVX1 tumor marker promises to complement CA125 for detection of early stage ovarian carcinoma. OVX1 has also been shown to be elevated in colon cancer patients. This study is designed to assess serum OVX1 levels in patients with specific stages of colon cancer, colon polyps or other GI disorders. Serum OVX1 and CEA were measured by radioimmunoassay or enzyme immunoassay for 206 patients at the time of colonoscopy or staging for colon carcinoma. In patients with stage I, II, III, or IV colon carcinoma, serum OVX1 was positive in 37%, 48%, 74% and 63%, respectively. Fifty-three percent of patients with colon polyps had elevated OVX1 levels, while OVX1 levels were positive in only 7% of healthy controls. If both OVX1 and CEA were considered, at least one of these markers was elevated in 36%, 60%, 79% or 89% of patients with stage I, II, III or IV colon carcinoma, respectively. The majority of patients with inflammatory bowel disease or diverticulosis also had elevated OVX1 levels. Both markers were positive in 27% of patients with colon carcinoma, and not in any patients with a normal colonoscopy or with a diagnosis of diverticulosis or hemorrhoids. In conclusion, serum OVX1 improves the sensitivity of CEA for detecting colon polyps and colon cancer; however, the use of OVX1 in this setting is hindered by its elevation in non-malignant colonic processes.
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PMID:OVX1 and CEA in patients with colon carcinoma, colon polyps and benign colon disorders. 1007 88


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