The present paper reports on an acute febrile attack in a patient suffering from chronic non-lithiasis cholecystitis. Acarids and acarid eggs in various stages of development were found in bile B following duodenal intubation in the course of the attack. The administration of magnesium sulphate was followed by abundant biliary vomiting. Fever fell within 6 days and marked clinical improvement was obtained.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
World J Gastroenterol
April 2002
Institute of Acupuncture, China Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Beijing 100700,China.
Aim: To display the thermoimages of the body surface in experimental cholecystitis, to observe the body surface temperature reaction in visceral disorders, and to study if the theory of body surface-viscera correlation is true and the mechanism of temperature changes along the meridians.
Methods: By injecting bacteria suspension into the stricture bile duct and gallbladder, 21 rabbits were prepared as acute pyogenic cholangiocholecystitis models, with another 8 rabbits prepared by the same process except without injection of bacteria suspension as control. The body surface infrared thermoimages were continuously observed on the hair shaven rabbit skin with AGA-782 thermovision 24h before, 1-11 d after and (2,3 wk) 4 wk after the operation with a total of over 10 records of thermoimages.
Chirurgia (Bucur)
October 1992
Clinica de Chirurgie, Spitalul Clinic Dr. I. Cantacuzino, Bucureşti.
In analysis of a group of 48 patients, the authors describe an entity they call acute cholangio-cholecystitis (or acute cholecystitis of choledochal origin) and define it by 4 obligatory criteria: 1. vesicular lesion of acute cholecystitis type; 2. the obstruction of the main bile duct in the direction of its junction with the cystic duct; 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Ig Bacteriol Virusol Parazitol Epidemiol Pneumoftiziol Bacteriol Virusol Parazitol Epidemiol
December 1978
The present paper reports on an acute febrile attack in a patient suffering from chronic non-lithiasis cholecystitis. Acarids and acarid eggs in various stages of development were found in bile B following duodenal intubation in the course of the attack. The administration of magnesium sulphate was followed by abundant biliary vomiting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!