Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C1510475 (diverticular disease)
2,138 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between 1974 and 1992, we perform 3,054 colonoscopies for diagnosis in 2,770 patients, both of sexes, between the ages of 1 and 101 yr, most of them over the fifth decade of life. In 300 procedures the bowel cleansing was made with the standard method of liquid diet and enemas, and in the other 2,754 with the oral administration of saline solution 9% with optimal results. We get the sedation of patients with the intravenous administration of diazepam 10mg, or pethidine 50 mg, or midazolam 2.5 to 5 mg, and in children with ketamine and the anesthesiologist assistance. In 95% of the procedures we can see the cecum and the ileum; the diagnosis was abnormal in 52.78% of cases, normal in 45.20%, and insufficient in 02.02% specially for a bad cleansing of the bowel. In the abnormal group, the most frequent diseases we diagnose were: polyps, cancer, diverticular disease, and specific inflammatory disease of the bowel like TBC, radiation proctosigmoiditis, amebiasis, and non-specific bowel disease: "colitis", ulcerative proctocolitis, erosive colitis, and Crohn's disease. Colonoscopy is a very important method for diagnosis of colon diseases, alone or complementary of double contrast X-ray of the colon.
...
PMID:[Colonoscopic diagnosis]. 794 39

Lower digestive bleeding is the bleeding distal to the ligament of Treitz and ranges from occult loss to massive hemorrhage. Acute and massive form represents about 20% of all gastrointestinal acute bleeding. In children and young patients the most frequent causes are juvenile, polyps Meckel diverticula, and intussusception; in adult ages are the diverticular disease of colon, angiodysplasia and neoplasia; we must include also the intestinal TBC, typhoid fever, and intestinal amebiasis. The first aim in the management of this acute syndrome is the treatment of the hypovolemic shock; when the patient is well resuscitated, the diagnosis of the cause of hemorrhage will start using the clinical history and physical examination, proctosigmoidoscopy, emergency colonoscopy and/or angiography, or scintigraphy with 99mTc-labeled red blood cells. Definitive therapy include endoscopic an angiographic methods, or the emergency surgery. Mortality is 11% to 21%.
...
PMID:[Massive lower digestive bleeding]. 852 22