Publications by authors named "Manescu N"

The authors report a case of a 60 years old Romanian male with peritoneal pseudomyxoma that was discovered to have a primary location in the greater omentum. Pseudomyxoma peritonei arising into the greater omentum is very rare. It is an original case report and the new data represents a well-balanced summary of a timely subject, with reference to the literature.

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The abdominal pregnancy is an extremely rare variety of the ectopic pregnancy. The symptoms are atypical, which causes a delay in putting the diagnosis, which is established most of the times when complications appear, which are always severe, and endanger the patients lives. This paper presents a rare complication of the abdominal pregnancy, at about 6 months old, stopped in evolution, complicated by an abscess, generalised peritonitis and peritoneal fistula.

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A total of 201 patients have been operated over the last 8 years, presenting with hiatal hernias. Five of the patients had para-oesophagian hiatal hernia while the remaining 196 had hiatal hernias following slippage. Some 107 hernias were isolated, and had a classical etiopathogeny, with gastro-oesophagial reflux in 85% of the cases.

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[Role of renal acidosis in the pathogenesis of osteodystrophy].

Rev Med Interna Neurol Psihiatr Neurochir Dermatovenerol Med Interna

August 1981

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Lesions of glomerular nephropathy were found in 5 cases of acute trichinosis, characterized by a low proteinuria and hematuria as well as by moderate deficit of the renal function. Renal biopsy revealed lesions of proliferative glomerulitis, while immunofluorescence examination showed granular deposits of IgG and beta1-C-globulin on basement membranes. Serum complement was reduced.

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[Renal complications after rifampicin].

Rev Ig Bacteriol Virusol Parazitol Epidemiol Pneumoftiziol Pneumoftiziol

January 1976

Six observations are presented of patients receiving intermitent rifampicin treatment (900 mg twice weekly) that developed acute renal failure during treatment (4 cases) or when treatment was taken up again, after an interruption of 6 months (2 cases). Following anuria of 4--14 days and nitrogen retention between 248 and 521 mg, the evolution was favourable. Clinical, biological and immunological data (anti-rifampicin antibodies were detected in 1/8 and 1/16 in 3 cases) suggest the immune origin of this type of renal accidents.

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Two renal biopsies selected from a large number of specimens taken by renal puncture from patients suffering from endemic nephropathy were studied by electron microscopy. Ultrastructural lesions were seen as electron-dense deposits in the walls of the glomerular capillaries, sometimes associated with glomerular proliferative processes. Such lesions, which are probably the early stages of this obscure renal disease, suggest that an auto-immune mechanism may be involved.

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