Search results for "abdominal"

showing 10 items of 886 documents

Fatal necrotising fasciitis associated with intramuscular injection of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs after uncomplicated endoscopic polypectom…

2007

Summary Necrotising fasciitis is a life-threatening infection of the superficial muscle fascia and the adjacent deep layer of subcutaneous tissue that is often fatal. A 46-year-old woman was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) three days after an uncomplicated endoscopic polypectomy because of necrotising fasciitis of left tight, buttock and retroperitoneal space and septic shock. Six hours after the polypectomy she was given an intramuscular injection of ketorolac in the left tight because of moderate low abdominal pain. Twelve and 24h later she was treated with another two intramuscular injection of diclofenac in the left tight for severe pains in the left hip joint region. The shoc…

Microbiology (medical)Abdominal painmedicine.medical_specialtyDiclofenacmedicine.medical_treatmentNecrotising fasciitisInjections IntramuscularFatal OutcomemedicineRetroperitoneal spaceHumansTreponemaFasciitis NecrotizingRetroperitoneal SpaceFasciitisSeptic shockbusiness.industryAnti-Inflammatory Agents Non-SteroidalIntestinal PolypsEndoscopyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseShock SepticPolypectomySurgeryKetorolacInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureAnesthesiaButtocksFemalemedicine.symptombusinessIntramuscular injectionmedicine.drugThe Journal of infection
researchProduct

Surgical Antimicrobial Prophylaxis in Abdominal Surgery for Neonates and Paediatrics: A RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method Consensus Study.

2022

Surgical site infections (SSIs), i.e., surgery-related infections that occur within 30 days after surgery without an implant and within one year if an implant is placed, complicate surgical procedures in up to 10% of cases, but an underestimation of the data is possible since about 50% of SSIs occur after the hospital discharge. Gastrointestinal surgical procedures are among the surgical procedures with the highest risk of SSIs, especially when colon surgery is considered. Data that were collected from children seem to indicate that the risk of SSIs can be higher than in adults. This consensus document describes the use of preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis in neonates and children that ar…

Microbiology (medical)Infectious Diseasespancreas surgerySettore MED/41 - ANESTESIOLOGIAPharmacology (medical)General Pharmacology Toxicology and Pharmaceuticsabdominal surgerygastrointestinal endoscopyBiochemistryMicrobiologyabdominal surgery; appendectomy; gastrointestinal endoscopy; liver surgery; pancreas surgeryappendectomyliver surgery
researchProduct

Risk Factors for Intra-Abdominal Candidiasis in Intensive Care Units: Results from EUCANDICU Study

2022

INTRODUCTION: Intra-abdominal infections represent the second most frequently acquired infection in the intensive care unit (ICU), with mortality rates ranging from 20% to 50%. Candida spp. may be responsible for up to 10-30% of cases. This study assesses risk factors for development of intra-abdominal candidiasis (IAC) among patients admitted to ICU. METHODS: We performed a case-control study in 26 European ICUs during the period January 2015-December 2016. Patients at least 18 years old who developed an episode of microbiologically documented IAC during their stay in the ICU (at least 48 h after admission) served as the case cohort. The control group consisted of adult patients who did no…

Microbiology (medical)MORTALITYInvasive candidiasiCandida; Intra-abdominal infection; Invasive candidiasis; Risk factorsCONTROLLED-TRIALCASPOFUNGINCANDIDEMIAInvasive candidiasisInfectious Diseaseslnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 4]Intra-abdominal infectionRisk factorsINFECTIONSMANAGEMENTEPIDEMIOLOGYPREDICTORSCONSENSUSCRITICALLY III PATIENTSCandida
researchProduct

Actinomadura pelletieri mycetoma--an atypical case with spine and abdominal wall involvement.

2011

We describe a case of mycetoma caused by Actinomadura pelletieri with simultaneous involvement of the spine, abdominal wall and retroperitoneal space in a man who had suffered from ‘Madura foot’ 10 years earlier. The characteristics of this case were analysed and contextualized among those of other cases of mycetoma caused by other micro-organisms found through a review of the international literature. The rarity of the disease in industrialized countries and its possible atypical presentations may hinder a prompt diagnosis. Culture techniques that allow detection of slow-growing fungi and actinomycetes should be routinely used when dealing with tissue samples from patients from tropical an…

Microbiology (medical)MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsChronic granulomatousMolecular Sequence DataBiologyMicrobiologymycetoma; Actinomadura pelletieriDisease courseAbdominal wallRecurrenceRNA Ribosomal 16SActinomadura pelletieriActinomycetalesmedicineInternational literatureRetroperitoneal spaceHumansMycetomaAbdominal WallActinomadura pelletieriGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedSpineRNA Bacterialmedicine.anatomical_structureAbdomenActinomycetales InfectionsmycetomaJournal of medical microbiology
researchProduct

Immunological diagnosis of human hydatid cyst relapse: utility of the enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot and discriminant analysis.

2000

ABSTRACT A discriminant technique was applied to the different serological patterns obtained by enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blotting (EITB) and by conventional immunological tests, in order to differentiate the residual antibody patterns present in healed hydatidosis from the ones present in patients with active hydatidosis. For this purpose, specific antibodies against Echinococcus granulosus were detected by indirect hemagglutination, agglutination of latex particles, basophil degranulation, and EITB for 23 patients with active hydatidosis and 45 patients with surgically cured hydatidosis. Discriminant analysis of the different serological patterns obtained by EITB and conventiona…

Microbiology (medical)Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyClinical BiochemistryImmunologyImmunologic TestsBasophil degranulationSerologyImmunoenzyme TechniquesEchinococcosisRecurrenceparasitic diseasesmedicineImmunology and AllergyAnimalsHumansEchinococcus granulosusAntigens Bacterialbiologymedicine.diagnostic_testbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseEchinococcosisLatex fixation testEchinococcusEchinococcusAbdominal ultrasonographybiology.proteinMicrobial ImmunologyAntibodyClinical and diagnostic laboratory immunology
researchProduct

Familial Trichostrongylus Infection Misdiagnosed as Acute Fascioliasis

2015

To the Editor: Human fascioliasis, infection with Fasciola spp. flukes, is highly pathogenic in both acute and chronic phases and can result in death (1). This disease has been recently emerging, in part linked to climate and global changes (2). Human Fasciola infection has been reported in 5 continents and is related to the disease’s wide spread in livestock. Guilan Province in northern Iran is a fascioliasis-endemic area where the largest human epidemics have occurred, together affecting ≈15,000 persons (3). In 2014, 3 sisters (ages 35, 33, and 38) and their 41-year-old brother (patients 1–4, respectively) sought medical care at the same time, all with a 3-week history of symptoms. The pa…

Microbiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyAbdominal painFascioliasisLetterTrichostrongylusEpidemiologylcsh:MedicineparasitesIranGastroenterologyAsymptomaticlcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesInternal medicinemedicineEosinophiliaAnimalsHumanslcsh:RC109-216TrichostrongylusmisdiagnosisDiagnostic ErrorsLetters to the EditorEggs per gramFecesbiologybusiness.industrylcsh:RTrichostrongylosisbiology.organism_classificationSurgeryzoonosesDiarrheaInfectious Diseasesmedicine.symptombusinessFlatulenceFamilial Trichostrongylus Infection Misdiagnosed as Acute FascioliasisEmerging Infectious Diseases
researchProduct

Ergebnisse der kontrastverstärkten MR-Angiographie der aortoiliakalen Gefäße mit einem 1-molaren Kontrastmittel bei 1,0 T: Vergleich zur i. a. DSA

2004

PURPOSE To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of contrast-enhanced MR angiography (CE-MRA) using a 1.0 molar contrast agent at 1.0 T for the diagnosis of abdominal aortic aneurysms and stenoses of renal or iliac arteries in comparison to intraarterial digital subtraction angiography (DSA). MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 19 patients with the suspicion of abdominal aortic aneurysm or stenosis of renal or iliac arteries were examined with CE-MRA at 1.0 T. Intra-arterial DSA served as reference in all cases. After test bolus tracking, 10 or 8 ml of the 1.0 molar contrast agent Gadobutrol corresponding to a dose of 0.1 - 0.15 mmol/kg bw were injected and imaging performed using a FLASH-3D sequen…

Molarmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectDigital subtraction angiographymedicine.diseaseAbdominal aortic aneurysmGadobutrolStenosisText miningOcclusioncardiovascular systemmedicineContrast (vision)Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadiologybusinessmedicine.drugmedia_commonRöFo - Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Röntgenstrahlen und der bildgebenden Verfahren
researchProduct

The Origin, Location, and Projections of the Embryonic Abdominal Motorneurons ofDrosophila

1997

We have used a retrograde labeling technique to identify motorneurons for each of the 30 body wall muscles of an abdominal hemisegment in the late stage 16Drosophilaembryo. Each motorneuron has a characteristic cell body position, dendritic arborization, and axonal projection. In addition, we have determined the neuroblasts of origin for most of the motorneurons we describe. Some organizational principles for the neuromuscular system have become apparent: (1) There is no obvious topographic relationship between the cell body positions of motorneurons and the position or orientation of the muscles they innervate; (2) motorneurons that innervate muscles of similar position and orientation are…

Motor Neuronsanimal structuresMusclesGeneral NeuroscienceMorphological typefungiBody positionLate stageArticlesDendritesAnatomyBiologybiology.organism_classificationNervous SystemEmbryonic stem cellGanglia InvertebrateDendritic ArborizationNeuroblastLarvaAnimalsCell LineageDrosophilaDrosophila (subgenus)NeuroscienceAbdominal MusclesThe Journal of Neuroscience
researchProduct

Periodontal status and the incidence of selected bacterial pathogens in periodontal pockets and vascular walls in patients with atherosclerosis and a…

2022

The aim of the study was to examine the periodontal status of patients with atherosclerosis and abdominal aortic aneurysms. The occurrence of 5 periodontopathogens was evaluated in periodontal pockets and atheromatous plaques together with specimens from pathologically changed vascular walls of aortic aneurysms. The study comprised 39 patients who qualified for vascular surgeries. Patients with periodontitis and concomitant atherosclerosis or aneurysms were enrolled in the study. Periodontal indices were evaluated, and subgingival plaque samples were examined together with atheromatous plaques or specimens from vascular walls to identify, by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), the following pe…

MultidisciplinaryIncidenceChronic PeriodontitisBacteroidesHumansPeriodontal PocketAtherosclerosisAggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitansPorphyromonas gingivalisPrevotella intermediaTreponema denticolaPlaque AtheroscleroticAortic Aneurysm AbdominalPLoS ONE
researchProduct

Ultrasound imaging assessment of the diaphragm and abdominal muscles in people with a recent history of moderate Covid-19 infection and healthy parti…

2023

Coronavirus disease (Covid-19) is a highly infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and is associated with a decrease of respiratory, physical, and psychological function, subsequently affecting quality of life. The aim of the present pilot study was to use ultrasound imaging (USI) to evaluate and compare the thickness of the diaphragm and abdominal muscles between individuals recently diagnosed with moderate Covid-19 infection and healthy individuals. Methods: A cross-sectional observational pilot study was performed. A total sample of 24 participants were recruited from a private medical center (Madrid, Spain): Covid-19 (n = 12) and healthy controls (n = 12). The external oblique…

MultidisciplinaryMedicina InvestigacióThoracic diaphragmAbdominalesInfecciones respiratoriasVirus testingRespiratory infectionsImagen por ultrasonidosVirusPilot studiesDiafragma torácicoContracción muscularMuscle contractionAbdominal musclesEstudios pilotoCovid-19Ultrasound imaging
researchProduct