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

A diet high in refined carbohydrate is implicated in the aetiology of some diseases of the colon-i.e., diverticular disease, irritable bowel syndrome, ulcerative colitis, non-occlusive ischaemic colitis, and pseudomembranous colitis. It is suggested that spasm of the smooth muscle is the common pathogenetic mechanism in these colonic diseases. The strength of the spasm producing increased pressure in the colonic lumen or wall and the length of time for which the colon has been affected are believed to determine the type of disease resulting. A diet high in refined carbohydrate allows the intense muscle spasm to occur because the physical buffering effect of faecal bulk is considerably reduced.
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PMID:Refined carbohydrate, smooth-muscle spasm and disease of the colon. 5 53

Surgical intervention after vascular surgery usually occurs as a result of bleeding or thrombosis, whereas general surgical problems requiring operation after vascular surgery are unusual. The purpose of this study was to review the results of operations for general surgical problems done soon after major vascular surgery. From January 1985 to December 1989, 1,236 major vascular procedures were performed, and 15 patients developed significant postoperative general surgical problems including perforated duodenal ulcer (2), perforated diverticular disease (2), evisceration and dehiscence (2), liver infarct (1), gangrenous cholecystitis (2), clostridial myonecrosis (1), pseudomembranous colitis (1), and small bowel obstruction (4). The overall mortality was very high (47%), and the chance of dying was significantly higher (p less than 0.05) if the initial vascular procedure was an emergency (100% mortality). All the patients who died (n = 7) succumbed to sepsis. There was a long delay in diagnosis in all groups; however, the delay did not correlate with mortality. Although this is a study of a small group of patients with a very heterogenous group of complications, several observations can be made: (1) a general surgical problem after vascular surgery carries a very high mortality; (2) general surgical complications in postoperative vascular patients in whom the initial procedure was an emergency are very poorly tolerated and almost uniformly lethal; and (3) these elderly patients have multiple medical problems and seem unlikely to tolerate any septic insult.
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PMID:General surgical problems requiring operation in postoperative vascular surgery patients. 192 85

A total of 512 colectomy and endoscopic biopsy specimens were reviewed to define the prevalence and possibly the significance of dystrophic goblet cells (DGCs) in neoplastic and nonneoplastic colonic diseases. As compared with an incidence of 1% in disease-free specimens, DGCs were observed in 38% of cases of inflammatory bowel disease, 23% of colonic malignancies, 30% of nonneoplastic polyps, 22% of adenomas, and 8% of cases showing acute self-limited colitis. In contrast, no dystrophic cells were seen in a group of miscellaneous diseases including diverticulitis, diverticulosis, abscesses, fistulas, ischemia, pseudomembranous colitis, melanosis coli, amyloidosis, shock, and mechanical trauma. Although dystrophic cells occur in association with dysplasia and carcinoma, their presence in nonpremalignant lesions, including acute self-limited colitis, raises doubt as to their diagnostic significance. Histochemical studies of the mucin composition in DGCs were unrevealing, failing to show any differences between DGCs and their morphologically normal counterparts in the same region of the colon.
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PMID:The incidence and carbohydrate histochemistry of dystrophic goblet cells in colon. 323 12

Complications involving the colon occurred in 28 of 325 patients who received renal transplants. Pseudomembranous colitis, the most common complication, affected 15 patients, two of whom required surgery. Three instances of diverticulitis were complicated by free perforation in two cases, and by colovesical fistula in one. Appendicitis occurred in two cases. The other complications were hemorrhage (from diverticulosis or angiodysplasia), nonspecific colitis, and ischemic colitis. Spontaneous colonic perforation did not occur. Two thirds of the colonic complications occurred within 30 days after transplantation. All cases of colon perforation, however, occurred later than one month after transplantation. It is concluded that pseudomembranous colitis is the most common colonic complication in renal transplant recipients, that it usually occurs early, and that it carries a good prognosis. Colonic perforations occurred later in this series and were treated successfully. All cases of ischemic colitis were part of terminal multiorgan system failure.
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PMID:Colonic complications in renal transplant recipients. 327 66

We present six cases to illustrate the protean clinical and sigmoidoscopic features of the amebic colitis. Three cases presented with a clinical picture resembling ulcerative colitis. In one fatal case, diverticular disease, ischemic colitis and toxic megacolon of uncertain origin were considered before arriving at the proper diagnosis. Two cases were believed to have pseudomembranous colitis on sigmoidoscopic examination. Given the multiple expressions of this entity, amebic colitis should be considered a diagnostic possibility in any protracted inflammatory condition of the colon. From the cases summarized here, it is evident that the clinical and endoscopic features of amebic colitis are variable and may often mimic other illnesses.
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PMID:[Clinical spectrum of amebic colitis]. 668 Feb 66

A staging classification is proposed by CT findings in 27 patients with acute abdomen, caused by inflammatory colonic non-parasitic pathology. Of the 17 patients with diverticular disease, 4 were stage A (edema/ischemia on thickness of the abdominal wall), 2 were stage B (partial intramural infarction on the abdominal wall) and 3 were stage C (abscess/peritonitis and obstruction/vascular strangulation). None of the patients in the series were stage D (ischemia/infarction of the colonic wall with dilatation). Of the 4 patients with ulcerative colitis, 3 were stage A and 1 in stage C. Of the 3 patients with Crohn's disease, 2 were stage A and 1 was in stage C. Classified as stage D were 1 pseudomembranous colitis, 1 volvulus and 1 idiopathic megacolon. Clinical severity was in parallel with CT stages that gave better information on the progression of the pathology. Staging by CT in acute abdomen caused by inflammatory colonic non-parasitic pathology could be useful in therapeutics.
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PMID:Acute abdomen caused by inflammatory colonic non-parasitic pathology: staging by CT. 1042 Oct 16

This study demonstrates the appearance of large bowel diseases on magnetic resonance (MR) images using breath-hold T2-weighted half-Fourier acquisition snapshot turbo spin-echo (HASTE), breath-hold T1-weighted spoiled gradient-echo (SGE), and breath-hold gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted SGE with and without fat-suppression sequences. The study represents a collective experience using a generalized combined abdominal-pelvic imaging protocol. Of 29 patients, 27 had surgical, endoscopic, microbiological, and/or histopathological correlation, and 2 had a diagnosis based on characteristic imaging findings. Fifteen patients had neoplastic disease including colon adenocarcinoma (n = 11), rectosigmoid carcinoid (n = 1), familial adenomatous polyposis (n = 2), and cecal lipoma (n = 1). Fourteen patients had non-neoplastic disease including diverticulosis (n = 6), ischemic colitis (n = 2), pseudomembranous colitis (n = 2), acute appendicitis with periappendiceal abscess (n = 2), Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI) colitis (n = 1), and Crohn's proctocolitis (n = 1). In all 15 patients with neoplastic diseases, MR imaging depicted the primary lesions and demonstrated local extent. Mass lesions were best shown on T2-weighted HASTE and gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed SGE images. Of 14 patients with non-neoplastic diseases, inflammatory changes were best shown on gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed T1-weighted SGE images in all cases. MR imaging with fast scanning breath-hold techniques and intravenous gadolinium enhancement provided good depiction and characterization of large bowel diseases.
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PMID:Colon diseases: MR evaluation using combined T2-weighted single-shot echo train spin-echo and gadolinium-enhanced spoiled gradient-echo sequences. 1093 93

Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are diagnoses that can be easily overlooked clinically. The aim of this study was to investigate if CT is able to make a contribution to the identification of previously unsuspected cases of IBD. We retrospectively identified cases in which the possibility of an IBD was raised in CT reports (over a 4-year period), by utilising a keyword search of the radiology database. Cases with a previously known or suspected IBD were rigorously excluded by review of case notes, and endoscopic, radiological, histological and microbiological findings. The CT images of the identified cases were reviewed by a blinded observer to document the extent of bowel wall thickening, the location of lesion(s), and presence of peri-colic fat abnormality, ascites and/or collections. The observer also attempted to corroborate the presence, and to identify the type, of IBD based on the CT appearances alone. Thirty-five cases (out of approximately 19,000 body CTs performed) of clinically unsuspected IBD were identified, of which 27 underwent further investigation. An IBD was confirmed in 48% (13 of 27): Crohn's disease (n=6), ulcerative colitis (n=2), pseudomembranous colitis (n=3) and other (n=2), of which 70% (9 of 13) were correctly typed by the reviewer. Inflammatory bowel disease was not substantiated in the remainder (14 of 27), although 7 of these had other bowel pathologies: diverticular disease (n=4); and carcinoma (n=3). Prospectively determining the presence, and furthermore type, of IBD on CT is challenging largely because of the considerable overlap in the appearances of the individual IBDs and indeed of normality. Nevertheless, CT is able to identify clinically unsuspected cases and radiologists should be alert to this treatable and not infrequently elusive diagnosis.
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PMID:The impact of helical computed tomography on the diagnosis of unsuspected inflammatory bowel disease in the large bowel. 1254 Nov 17

To determine the pattern of lower gastrointestinal disease in the Eastern region of Saudi Arabia we analysed 1907 colorectal biopsies obtained from 1590 consecutive patients (1256 males & 334 females), evaluated during a 13 year period (1983-1996) in a tertiary care teaching hospital. The age range was 6-81 years with a mean of 37 + 15. During the same period 6874 new patients were seen in the Gastroenterology Clinics. Saudi Arabs constituted 970 (61 %) of all patients. The remaining 620 (39%) were non-Saudi, mostly of Arab origin from neighbouring countries. The most common presenting symptom for referral was abdominal pain (1193 patients, 75%) followed by diarrhea (636 patients, 40%). The most frequent histologic diagnosis was a normal mucosa followed by non specific proctocolitis accounting respectively for 37.9% and 37.4% of all cases. These were followed by schistosomiasis, 113 (7.1%), adenocarcinoma, 91 (5.7%) and ulcerative colitis, 91 cases with a relative frequency of 5.7% and a calculated prevalence of 1.3%. Of significance was the encounter of 14 cases of Crohn's disease amounting to 0.9% of all cases with a calculated prevalence of 0.2%. A minority of 83 patients (5.2%) were cases of either a benign polyp, diverticular disease, tuberculosis, ischaemia, lymphoma, pseudomembranous colitis (PMC), eosinophilic gastroenteritis or malacoplakia. These data show that although a "normal mucosa" and "nonspecific proctocolitis" were the dominant diagnoses, significantly, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease exist and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of lower GI disease.
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PMID:The pattern of lower gastrointestinal disease in the eastern region of Saudi Arabia: a retrospective analysis of 1590 consecutive patients. 1986 25

Rifaximin, a non-resorbable broadband antibiotic, was approved in Germany 2 years ago for the treatment of traveller's diarrhoea caused by non-invasive enteropathogens. On account of the very good tolerance and the high efficacy against almost all enteropathogens this pharmaceutical, which has been available for 25 years, bears a high potential in many other indications which are currently under clinical investigations, including: symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease, Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhoea and pseudomembranous colitis, small bowel intestinal bacterial overgrowth, irritable bowel syndrome and hepathic encephalopathy. The present overview demonstrates potential indications in the field of gastroenterology and critically reviews the significance of rifiximin in the treatment of these diseases based on the latest clinica data.
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PMID:[Rifaximin--a non-resorbable antibiotic with many indications in gastroenterology]. 2122 68


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