نتایج جستجو برای: atypical gallstone pain

تعداد نتایج: 291511  

Journal: :Journal of lipid research 2006
Ina Bergheim Simone Harsch Oliver Mueller Silke Schimmel Peter Fritz Eduard F Stange

Although a cholesterol supersaturation of gallbladder bile has been identified as the underlying pathophysiologic defect, the molecular pathomechanism of gallstone formation in humans remains poorly understood. A deficiency of the apical sodium bile acid transporter (ASBT) and ileal lipid binding protein (ILBP) in the small intestine may result in bile acid loss into the colon and might promote...

Journal: :CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne 2008
M Justin Zaman Cornelia Junghans Neha Sekhri Ruoling Chen Gene S Feder Adam D Timmis Harry Hemingway

BACKGROUND There is speculation that women and South Asian people are more likely than men and white people to report atypical angina and that they are less likely to undergo invasive management of angina. We sought to determine whether atypical symptoms of angina pectoris in women and South Asians impacted clinically important outcomes and clinical management. METHODS We prospectively identi...

Journal: :Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques 2016

Journal: :Military Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal of Serbia 2010

Journal: :South African Medical Journal 2016

Journal: :Journal of Investigative Medicine High Impact Case Reports 2021

Journal: :Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences 2014

Journal: :BMJ case reports 2012
Tejinderjit Singh Athwal Nicholas Howard Jane Belfield Ufuk Gur

Gallstone ileus is a complication of cholelithiasis resulting from a fistula between the gallbladder and the gastrointestinal tract. If sufficiently large, a gallstone may lodge at the narrowest part of the gastrointestinal tract, usually the terminal ileum, and present with small bowel obstruction. Here the authors present the unusual case of an 82-year-old man who developed symptoms and signs...

Journal: :American family physician 2005
Charles F Bellows David H Berger Richard A Crass

Many patients with gallstones can be managed expectantly. Generally, only persons with symptoms related to the presence of gallstones (e.g., steady, nonparoxysmal pain lasting four to six hours located in the upper abdomen) or complications (such as acute cholecystitis or gallstone pancreatitis) warrant surgical intervention. Biliary pain is alleviated by cholecystectomy in the majority of case...

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