Cases reported "Abdominal Injuries"

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1/101. spinal cord injury in a fetus.

    In her eighth month of pregnancy a woman was stabbed in the abdomen with a barbecue fork. Upon delivery one week later, the child was noted to have two scars in the thoracic region on the back. The legs were flaccid. Surgical exploration at the age of seven months revealed marked, dense scarring of spinal cord and arachnoid membrane. No similar case was found in the literature.
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ranking = 1
keywords = back
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2/101. Laparoscopic drainage of an intramural duodenal hematoma.

    A 21-year-old man was admitted with vomiting and abdominal pain 3 days after sustaining blunt abdominal trauma by being tackled in a game of American football. A diagnosis of intramural hematoma of the duodenum was made using computed tomography and upper gastrointestinal tract contrast radiography. The hematoma caused obstructive jaundice by compressing the common bile duct. The contents of the hematoma were laparoscopically drained. A small perforation was then found in the duodenal wall. The patient underwent laparotomy and repair of the injury. Laparoscopic surgery can be used as definitive therapy in this type of abdominal trauma.
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ranking = 209.63155301904
keywords = abdominal pain
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3/101. A patient with a traumatic right diaphragmatic hernia occurring 4 years after sustaining injury--statistical observations of a delayed diaphragmatic hernia caused by uncomplicated injury in japan.

    We describe our experience with a patient in whom a traumatic right diaphragmatic hernia developed 4 years after sustaining injury and review cases of delayed diaphragmatic injury reported in japan. The patient was a 28-year-old man who sustained a severe contusion of the right epigastric region and fractured a right rib in a traffic accident in September 1992. In August 1996, the patient presented with shortness of breath on effort or after meals. A chest roentgenogram revealed intestinal gas in the right side of the thoracic cavity. A right diaphragmatic hernia was diagnosed on the basis of a gastrointestinal series, and the patient was operated on. The hernial orifice extended anteriorly from the central tendon in an 11:00 direction and measured 11 x 6 cm. The small intestine, right side of the colon, and liver were herniated. A total of 297 cases of blunt traumatic diaphragmatic hernia were reported in japan between 1981 and 1996, including 47 cases (left side, 32 cases; right side, 15 cases) of delayed diaphragmatic hernia, defined as occurring one month or more after injury. Diaphragmatic hernia should be considered as a possible diagnosis in patients with abnormal shadows in the thoracic region who have recently sustained injury or who have a past history of injury.
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ranking = 15.748959985789
keywords = chest
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4/101. Posttraumatic intestinal stenosis presenting as a perforation: report of a case.

    A 78-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital after falling into a ditch approximately 1 m deep and sustaining a blunt abdominal trauma with a left femur fracture. On the tenth day after admission, symptoms of a small bowel obstruction occurred. A nasogastric tube was inserted, and the symptoms thus improved. She sometimes complained of abdominal pain during the 12 months after the fall, but recovered with conservative management. The next year, she was readmitted to the hospital for a pin extraction of the left femur bone. During this admission, 15 months since her admission after her fall, she again complained of abdominal pain. abdominal pain increased with a muscular defense, and abdominal x-rays revealed free air. She was referred to our hospital with a diagnosis of perforative peritonitis, and emergency surgery was performed. Upon laparotomy, circumferential stenoses of the small bowel were recognized in the proximal segments about 40cm, 80cm, and 100cm from the ileocecal region. In addition, a perforation and prominent dilatation of the bowel segment was observed just proximal to the stenosis about 100cm from the ileocecal region. She underwent a small intestinal resection at two sites. There were no findings of an intestinal specific ulcer, such as Crohn's disease, intestinal tuberculosis, or malignancy, based on the results of a histopathological examination.
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ranking = 419.26310603807
keywords = abdominal pain
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5/101. hypertension following minor trauma: a rare presentation of pheochromocytoma.

    The diagnosis of pheochromocytoma (Pheo) can be challenging due to the variety of potential presentations of this infrequent tumor. A 16-year-old boy presented with hypertension and sudden abdominal pain after minor blunt abdominal trauma. Both computer tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) scanning identified a right suprarenal mass, and raised the possibility of a Pheo. This diagnosis was confirmed through urine catecholamine testing and (131)I metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scanning. An extra-adrenal Pheo was successfully resected. The presentation of Pheos is quite variable, and patients may often be essentially asymptomatic. Pheo should be considered in hypertensive pediatric patients with a history of blunt abdominal trauma.
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ranking = 209.63155301904
keywords = abdominal pain
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6/101. Bile duct injuries from non-penetrating abdominal trauma in childhood.

    Bile duct injuries from non-penetrating abdominal trauma are uncommon, but when unrecognized cause serious morbidity and significant mortality. To elucidate the problem three cases encountered over a 15-year period in the Manchester Children's hospitals are reported, together with a review of the literature.
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ranking = 15.748959985789
keywords = chest
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7/101. Traumatic adrenal injury in children.

    BACKGROUND: Multiple organ injury in children is an increasingly frequent phenomenon in the modern emergency room. Adrenal hemorrhage associated with this type of trauma has received little attention in the past. OBJECTIVES: Using computed tomography, we sought to determine the rate and nature of adrenal gland injury in children following blunt abdominal trauma due to motor vehicular accident. methods: A total of 121 children with blunt abdominal trauma were examined and total body CT was performed in cases of multi-organ trauma or severe neurological injury. RESULTS: Of all the children who presented with blunt abdominal trauma over a 51 month period, 6 (4.95%) had adrenal hemorrhage. In all cases only the right adrenal gland was affected. Coincidental injury to the chest and other abdominal organs was noted in 66.7% and 50% of patients, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Traumatic adrenal injury in the pediatric population may be more common than previously suspected. Widespread application of the more sophisticated imaging modalities available today will improve the detection of damage to the smaller organs in major collision injuries and will help in directing attention to the mechanism of trauma.
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ranking = 15.748959985789
keywords = chest
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8/101. Acute colonic intramural hematoma due to blunt abdominal trauma.

    Trauma to the colon is uncommon and accounts for only 3-5% of all blunt abdominal injuries. Among them, intramural hematoma of the colon is a rare complication and the acute form is rarer than the chronic form. We report a 37-year-old man who presented with abdominal pain followed by intestinal obstruction due to a blunt trauma. The initial diagnosis was done by sonography and proved by computed tomography (CT). Abdominal sonography also detected an increment in the size of the hematoma with progressive abdominal cramping pain that prompted urgent laparotomy. Ileocolic segmental resection with end-to-end ileocolostomy was performed and the patient recovered uneventfully. Based on our experience with a patient suffering from an intramural colonic hematoma following blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) and based on a review of the literature, we discuss the different clinical manifestations, difficulties of diagnosis, and different treatment modalities of this disease entity. We conclude that acute colonic hematoma can be diagnosed by sonography and/or CT in contrast to the early reported cases, in the pre-CT era, when they could only be diagnosed at laparotomy. endoscopy may also be helpful for diagnosis in some cases. Although expectant therapy may be successful in some cases, the majority of the cases may need operation.
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ranking = 209.63155301904
keywords = abdominal pain
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9/101. Traumatic avulsion of kidney into the chest through a ruptured diaphragm in a boy.

    This report presents a case of a teenage patient who survived following severe blunt trauma with complete avulsion of the right kidney into the chest through a ruptured diaphragm. The combination of kidney avulsion into the chest is extremely rare. Only three similar cases have been reported in the English literature to date (1-3).
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ranking = 94.493759914733
keywords = chest
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10/101. Serial bedside emergency ultrasound in a case of pediatric blunt abdominal trauma with severe abdominal pain.

    We present a case of a teenager with isolated left renal laceration with perirenal hematoma. The patient had presented with severe left upper quadrant (LUQ) pain following blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) sustained during a sledding accident. A screening bedside focused abdominal sonogram for trauma (FAST) rapidly excluded free fluid on two serial examinations, 30 minutes apart. It provided the pediatric emergency physician with a measure of diagnostic confidence that the patient could be safely transported to the CT suite for detailed delineation of his injury. Moreover, narcotic analgesia was liberally administered early in his illness course, without the fear of unmasking potential hypovolemia when it was known that he did not have gross intra-abdominal bleeding on his bedside ultrasound (US). It also provided a working diagnosis of the primary organ of injury. Our hospital, like many pediatric hospitals around the nation, does not have in-house 24-hour radiology support. We suggest that the use of the bedside US be extended to the stable pediatric patient in severe abdominal pain following BAT. It can serve as a valuable, rapid, noninvasive, bedside, easily repeated, fairly accurate triage tool to evaluate pediatric BAT with severe pain.
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ranking = 1048.1577650952
keywords = abdominal pain
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