Cases reported "Liver Abscess"

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1/97. liver abscess secondary to fish bone penetration of the gastric wall: a case report.

    An unusual case of liver abscess caused by fish bone perforation of the stomach is presented in this report. A 65-year-old woman was admitted to the Far Eastern Memorial Hospital for abdominal pain, fever and chills. physical examination revealed anemia and tenderness in the epigastrium. Laboratory data showed leukocytosis and abnormal liver function. Computerized tomography of the abdomen disclosed a huge abscess in the left lobe of the liver. Exploratory laparotomy was performed and a fish bone, 3.7 cm in length, was found perforating the stomach with penetration into the left lobe of the liver, resulting in a hepatic abscess. drainage of the liver abscess with removal of the fish bone and simple closure of the gastric perforation were performed. The patient recovered uneventfully.
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keywords = abdominal pain, pain
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2/97. Hepatic abscess due to gastric perforation by ingested fish bone demonstrated by computed tomography.

    Perforation of the gastrointestinal tract by ingested foreign bodies is rare. Preoperative diagnosis of complications due to foreign bodies in the gastrointestinal tract can rarely be achieved because the conventional radiographic appearance is nonspecific. This report describes a 69-year-old woman who presented with vague clinical manifestations, intermittent abdominal pain, and low-grade fever. Hepatic abscess, secondary to a foreign body penetrating the gastric wall, was diagnosed preoperatively using computed tomography findings. On exploration, the foreign body turned out to be a fish bone. The abscess was confirmed and drained during surgery and a partial gastrectomy was performed. This case illustrates the value of CT in the evaluation of this condition.
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3/97. The development of a pancreatic abscess, suppurative pylethrombosis, and multiple hepatic abscesses after a pancreatojejunostomy for chronic pancreatitis: report of a case.

    We present herein an autopsy case of 63-year-old Japanese man who died as a result of pancreatic abscess, suppurative pylethrombosis, and multiple liver abscesses that had developed 10 years after a pancreato- and cystojejunostomy with side-to-side anastomosis for chronic pancreatitis. Even after this operation, the patient had continued to consume excessive amounts of alcohol. He had first experienced back pain with leukocytosis 9 years after the operation, which relapsed the following year. Despite percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage, his icterus had deteriorated into hepatic insufficiency. Computed tomographic scans of the abdomen had disclosed multiple liver abscesses. At autopsy, a pancreatic abscess and suppurative pylethrombosis as well as multiple liver abscesses were found. There have been few reported cases of such lethal complications developing after a pancreato- and cystojejunostomy for chronic pancreatitis. As the consumption of alcohol would have exacerbated the chronic pancreatitis, such patients should be strongly advised to abstain from drinking alcohol.
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ranking = 0.085354095215658
keywords = pain
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4/97. Pyogenic liver abscess as a cause of acute upper abdominal pain. A report of two cases.

    The clinical course of 2 patients with acute abdominal pain, which was eventually found to be due to pyogenic hepatic abscesses is described. One patient, operated on late in the course, died; the other, who was operated on early, recovered. The importance of considering this life-threatening disease in the differential diagnosis of acute abdominal pain is emphasized.
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ranking = 6.0602755511291
keywords = abdominal pain, pain, upper
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5/97. A vanishing liver abscess complicated with klebsiella pneumoniae chest wall abscess: a case report.

    Septic metastasis is a unique feature of klebsiella pneumoniae liver abscess in taiwan. The case we report is a vanishing K. pneumoniae liver abscess with septic metastasis of the chest wall. The initial finding of a 36 year-old male with no previous medical history, was a huge hepatic mass presented on the sonography during a physical checkup. hepatitis b, C serology, tumor markers and evidence of metastatic diseases were all negative. A computerized tomography examination was also inconclusive about its nature. Due to the patient's refusal of a liver biopsy, only oral antibiotics were medicated at the outpatient department. Unexpectedly, the follow-up computerized tomography, taken 4 weeks later, demonstrated that the liver mass was nearly absent, while a protruding painful lesion developed over the right chest wall. Under sono-guided aspiration, the chest wall mass was proved to be a pyogenic abscess. The Gram stain revealed gram-negative bacilli and the bacterial culture yielded K. pneumoniae. Under the impression of K. pneumoniae liver abscess with chest wall septic metastasis, after performing percutaneous drainage of the chest wall abscess, the patient was only given parenteral antibiotics for treatment. Both the liver and the chest wall abscesses were at last completely eradicated.
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ranking = 0.1263129848008
keywords = pain, chest
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6/97. A man with fever, rigors, and poor oral hygiene.

    A 62-year-old man presented to the emergency department with a one-week history of subjective fever and rigors. He had had epigastric pain for three weeks, for which he was taking ranitidine, and in the past two to three months had experienced night sweats, a nonproductive cough, nausea, vomiting, and a 30-lb weight loss. He denied dsypnea, chest pain, hematochezia, melena, or any change in bowel habits.
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ranking = 0.17480407938983
keywords = pain, chest
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7/97. Polymicrobial cholangitis and liver abscess in a patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

    cholangitis/cholangiopathy associated with the human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) infection is characterized by chronic abdominal pain, low-grade fever, cholestasis, and sometimes areas of focal or diffuse dilatation of the bile ducts that may be apparent on noninvasive imaging studies. Although the etiology of this biliary disease may be multifactorial, it appears to be the result of immunosuppression and/or secondary opportunistic infections rather than a direct cytopathic effect of hiv itself. Various opportunistic pathogens, including cytomegalovirus, cryptosporidium, campylobacter fetus, and candida albicans, have been implicated as causes of hiv-associated cholangitis. We report an unusual case of polymicrobial cholangitis and liver abscess in a patient with hiv infection.
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8/97. Multilocular pyogenic hepatic abscess complicating ascaris lumbricoides infestation.

    A 74-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with frequent right flank pain. The multiple multilocular hepatic abscesses were revealed by computed tomography. Radiographs following a barium meal showed a linear filling defect in the ileum consistent with ascariasis. One day after treatment with pyrantel pamoate, an Ascaris was passed in the stool. The pyogenic hepatic abscesses gradually healed with both antibiotics and continuous drainage. After 2 months, he was discharged. In this case, the pyogenic hepatic abscesses were thus considered to have been caused by an inflammation which spread through the portal vein.
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ranking = 0.085354095215658
keywords = pain
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9/97. Potential pitfalls in nuclear medicine: a paediatric teaching case.

    An infant with complex cardiac defects and isomerism had a persistent pyrexia of undetermined aetiology following cardiac surgery. Radionuclide leucocyte scan showed a focus of increased uptake in the right upper quadrant (RUQ) felt to be compatible with an abscess. However, correlation with clinical data and multimodality imaging allowed the correct diagnosis of ectopic splenic tissue in the RUQ to be made. This report emphasises the need for an integrated approach to imaging. patients with abnormalities of viscero-atrial situs require careful assessment of their splenic status. Visceral heterotaxy may result in confusing imaging appearances unless the anatomy has been accurately documented.
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ranking = 0.015068887782265
keywords = upper
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10/97. chromobacterium violaceum infection in brazil. A case report.

    We report the second case of infection with chromobacterium violaceum that occurred in brazil. A farm worker living in the State of Sao Paulo presented fever and severe abdominal pain for four days. At hospitalization the patient was in a toxemic state and had a distended and painful abdomen. Chest X-ray and abdominal ultrasound revealed bilateral pneumonia and hypoechoic areas in the liver. The patient developed failure of multiple organs and died a few hours later. blood culture led to isolation of C. violaceum resistant to ampicillin and cephalosporins and sensitive to chloramphenicol, tetracyclin, aminoglicosydes, and ciprofloxacin. autopsy revealed pulmonary microabscesses and multiple abscesses in the liver. The major features of this case are generally observed in infections by C. violaceum: rapid clinical course, multiple visceral abscesses, and high mortality. Because of the antimicrobial resistance profile of this Gram-negative bacillus, for appropriate empirical antibiotic therapy it is important to consider chromobacteriosis in the differential diagnosis of severe community infections in brazil.
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ranking = 1.0853540952157
keywords = abdominal pain, pain
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