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1/736. Pill-induced gastric injury.

    Pill-induced esophageal injury is a well described clinical entity. In contrast, pill-induced gastric injury has not been well characterized. In this report, we describe two patients with acute gastric ulcers due to pill ingestion and review the available literature on pill-induced gastric injury. The first patient presented with upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage and was found to have a large gastric ulcer with multiple potassium chloride pills in the ulcer crater. The second patient presented with odynophagia and endoscopy revealed doxycycline-induced esophageal and gastric injury. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of doxycycline-induced gastric ulcer.
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2/736. Severe panarteritis associated with drug abuse.

    A case of panarteritis with purpura fulminans, mononeuritis multiplex, gastrointestinal manifestation and presumably cardiac involvement in a previously healthy 22-year-old man with a history of drug abuse including cocaine, cannabinoids and methamphetamines is described. Histopathological examination of the gut led to the diagnosis of panarteritis without immune deposits. Antineutrophil antibodies were negative. Besides the drugs, no other possible cause of vasculitis was found. The patient recovered completely after 1 year. Drug abuse is a thus possible cause of severe extracerebral disabling vasculitis.
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keywords = gas
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3/736. A case of acute phlegmonous gastritis successfully treated with antibiotics.

    Acute phlegmonous gastritis is a rare disorder in which bacterial infection occurs in the gastric wall. gastrectomy involving the affected area has been thought to be an effective form of treatment. The authors report a case of a 32-year-old woman who had severe upper abdominal pain without signs of peritoneal irritation. endoscopy showed edematous and reddened gastric mucosa with a mass lesion in the gastric antrum. Endoscopic ultrasonography showed thickening of the antral wall and a low-echoic mass in the gastric antrum, thought to represent a fluid collection. White pus was aspirated from the mass. Localized type of acute phlegmonous gastritis with a gastric abscess was diagnosed. culture of the pus showed streptococcus pneumoniae. Through early diagnosis without laparotomy, the patient's gastritis was successfully treated with antibiotics alone.
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ranking = 1.0909090909091
keywords = gas
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4/736. Evolution of acute cytomegalovirus gastritis to chronic gastrointestinal dysmotility in a nonimmunocompromised adult.

    A 30-year-old nonimmunocompromised woman developed chronic gastrointestinal dysmotility as a consequence of acute cytomegalovirus infection. The acute nature of the infection was documented by high immunoglobulin m antibody titer to cytomegalovirus (CMV); the chronicity of the infection was shown by persistence of CMV in biopsy specimens of her gastrointestinal tract over a 21/2-year period. Gastrointestinal dysmotility was confirmed by delayed emptying on gastric nuclear scintigraphy, by retrograde propagation of migrating myoelectric complexes on small intestinal manometry, and by presence of tachygastria on cutaneous electrogastrography. The patient's nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and early satiety resolved after a short course of treatment with leuprolide acetate but returned after medication was discontinued. Her symptoms persisted despite clearance of CMV from the gastrointestinal tract after a course of treatment with ganciclovir. These observations show that acute CMV infection can cause gastrointestinal dysmotility in nonimmunocompromised individuals and that the disturbance in gastrointestinal motor function may persist for years after viral infection of the gastrointestinal tract has been eradicated.
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ranking = 1.5454545454545
keywords = gas
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5/736. Laparoscopic gastropexy for acute gastric volvulus: a case report.

    A 7-year-old girl presented with an acute gastric volvulus that was reduced with a nasogastric catheter. An anterior gastropexy was undertaken laparoscopically. The gastrocolic omentum was deficient along most of the greater curvature, which had allowed organoaxial volvulus. Two years later, gastric volvulus has not recurred. laparoscopy is an acceptable approach for the evaluation and treatment of children with acute gastric volvulus.
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keywords = gas
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6/736. Direct sonographic signs of acute duodenal ulcer.

    Sonography was performed in two patients with acute epigastric pain. Isolated thickening of the duodenal wall with an echogenic line within were considered to be signs of duodenal ulcer in keeping with a suggestive clinical background. The extension of this line beyond the duodenal wall and the periduodenal fluid were indicators of perforation. The images in our two patients indicate the usefulness of ultrasonography when performed carefully in selected cases.
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ranking = 0.090909090909091
keywords = gas
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7/736. pancreatitis caused by duodenal duplication.

    The authors present the investigations and surgical treatment of two cases of duodenal cystic duplication. abdominal pain and gastroesophageal reflux were the most important symptoms and signs associated with an history of recurrent acute pancreatitis. Computed tomography scan, ultrasound examination, and cholangiography confirmed preoperatively the diagnosis, and a transduodenal surgical approach was carried out in both children. A simple marsupialization of the cyst was performed in the former, and a sphincterotomy with papillosphincteroplasty was associated in the latter. The diagnosis was confirmed by microscopy, and both the children are asymptomatic after a 14 and 18 months of follow-up. This report focuses on the importance of the cholangiopancreatography for every child presenting with recurrent, unexplained bouts of acute pancreatitis, and underlines the technical surgical aspects on the basis of the anatomic identification of the malformation.
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ranking = 0.090909090909091
keywords = gas
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8/736. Subacute encephalopathy after combination chemotherapy including moderate-dose methotrexate in a patient with gastric cancer.

    An episode of subacute encephalopathy after the infusion of a moderate dose of methotrexate (1500 mg/m2) (MTX) is reported in a young adult with metastastic gastric cancer. Weakness of the right arm, focal seizures, lethargy and confusion appeared on day 10. High signal intensity in periventricular white matter was observed on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. Symptoms resolved spontaneously and completely after 48 h. We believe that this represents an unusual case of moderate-dose MTX-induced neurotoxicity in a patient with gastric cancer, which has not previously been reported.
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ranking = 0.54545454545455
keywords = gas
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9/736. Acute gastroenteritis in children.

    BACKGROUND: Acute gastroenteritis is a common childhood illness. Most cases are caused by rotavirus infection. OBJECTIVE: This article discusses the classic presentation of gastroenteritis in children, which includes a short history of vomiting followed by diarrhoea. DISCUSSION: dehydration is the main problem in children with gastroenteritis, and severe dehydration is a medical emergency. Mild to moderately dehydrated children can be safely treated at home with oral rehydration therapy, however parents require careful explanation of the disease, its course and potential complications. Early reintroduction of usual foods (breast milk, formula or solids) has been shown to shorten the illness. Babies may need to be reviewed within 8 hours and older children within a day.
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ranking = 0.63636363636364
keywords = gas
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10/736. Human infections caused by V. parahaemolyticus in czechoslovakia.

    vibrio parahaemolyticus was isolated in two subjects with acute gastroenteritis. The patients' history included stay in pakistan or india. They probably contracted the infection on board an aeroplane where they ingested cold meal containing sea products. The possibility of this conditioned pathogen occurring also in an inland country is pointed out.
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keywords = gas
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