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Gastroenterology Commons

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Digestive System Diseases

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Abdominal pain

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Gastroenterology

A Rare Case Of Perforated Jejunal Diverticulitis, Mohamed Nagi Md, Stanley Deturris Md, Ang Darwin Feb 2020

A Rare Case Of Perforated Jejunal Diverticulitis, Mohamed Nagi Md, Stanley Deturris Md, Ang Darwin

General Surgery

Introduction: Jejunal diverticulosis is a rare condition with clinical incidence of 0.5%. It is less common than colonic and duodenum diverticulosis. It is usually asymptomatic and diagnosed incidentally but it may cause chronic symptoms and acute complications. The aim of the case report to increase the awareness about the disease Case Report: This is a 56-year-old Caucasian male who presented with abdominal pain and fever and was diagnosed with transverse colon diverticulitis with microperforation on CT scan. Patient was treated nonoperatively with antibiotics and was discharged home. Two months later, he presented with similar recurrent abdominal pain and was found …


A Scary Case Of Gastroenteritis, Kairavee D. Dave, Vivek Choksi, Sufian Sorathia, Rulz Cantave, Steven Kaplan Oct 2019

A Scary Case Of Gastroenteritis, Kairavee D. Dave, Vivek Choksi, Sufian Sorathia, Rulz Cantave, Steven Kaplan

Gastroenterology

No abstract provided.


Amoxicillin-Clavulanate Related Liver Injury, Devin Vaishnani Md, Pratikkumar Vekaria Md, Ravish Patel Md, Megan White Md, Marvin Vaishnani Md Oct 2019

Amoxicillin-Clavulanate Related Liver Injury, Devin Vaishnani Md, Pratikkumar Vekaria Md, Ravish Patel Md, Megan White Md, Marvin Vaishnani Md

Gastroenterology

Introduction: Recognition of Drug-induced Liver Injury (DILI) may be challenging as it is often diagnosis of exclusion, unavailability of diagnostic test and variability in presentation. Many antibiotics can cause DILI but Amoxicillin-Clavulanate has rare adverse reaction causing mixed cholestatic-hepatocellular injury. Since amoxicillin alone does not induce liver injury, combination of amoxicillin and clavulanic acid could be responsible for this adverse reaction. It can be due to metabolic idiosyncrasy or hypersensitivity mechanism. Case Report: 64-year-old female with no pertinent PMH presented to ER with abdominal pain and jaundice. She had abdominal pain for 4-5 days. Abdominal pain was constant and located …