Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study. / Jess, Per; Bjerregaard, B; Brynitz, S; Holst-Christensen, J; Kalaja, E; Lund-Kristensen, J; Matzen, P.

In: American Journal of Surgery, Vol. 144, No. 3, 01.09.1982, p. 338-40.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jess, P, Bjerregaard, B, Brynitz, S, Holst-Christensen, J, Kalaja, E, Lund-Kristensen, J & Matzen, P 1982, 'Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study', American Journal of Surgery, vol. 144, no. 3, pp. 338-40.

APA

Jess, P., Bjerregaard, B., Brynitz, S., Holst-Christensen, J., Kalaja, E., Lund-Kristensen, J., & Matzen, P. (1982). Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study. American Journal of Surgery, 144(3), 338-40.

Vancouver

Jess P, Bjerregaard B, Brynitz S, Holst-Christensen J, Kalaja E, Lund-Kristensen J et al. Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study. American Journal of Surgery. 1982 Sep 1;144(3):338-40.

Author

Jess, Per ; Bjerregaard, B ; Brynitz, S ; Holst-Christensen, J ; Kalaja, E ; Lund-Kristensen, J ; Matzen, P. / Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study. In: American Journal of Surgery. 1982 ; Vol. 144, No. 3. pp. 338-40.

Bibtex

@article{a2299e039f8e44bd9900e54e230a5751,
title = "Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study",
abstract = "In a prospective study of 230 patients followed up for 5 years after hospital admission for acute non-specific abdominal pain, 21 patients (9 patients) could not be traced, and 11 (5 percent) had died. Only one death was related to symptoms from the first admission. Of the remaining 198 patients, 77 percent were healthy and free of any symptoms during the observation period. Fourteen patients (7 percent) had been hospitalized once more due to acute abdominal pain; 5 had acute appendicitis. The others had diagnosed recurrences of nonspecific abdominal pain. Sixteen percent complained of continuing of intermittent abdominal symptoms, mainly of benign colonic or gynecologic origin, while malignant disease developed in 1 percent (or 4 percent of patients over 50 years of age). It is concluded that control of these patients is generally unnecessary, but when symptoms recur further examinations, especially for colonic or gynecologic disease, should be carried out. In patients over 50 years old, the possibility of malignant disease should be kept in mind.",
author = "Per Jess and B Bjerregaard and S Brynitz and J Holst-Christensen and E Kalaja and J Lund-Kristensen and P Matzen",
year = "1982",
month = sep,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "144",
pages = "338--40",
journal = "American Journal of Surgery",
issn = "0002-9610",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prognosis of acute nonspecific abdominal pain. A prospective study

AU - Jess, Per

AU - Bjerregaard, B

AU - Brynitz, S

AU - Holst-Christensen, J

AU - Kalaja, E

AU - Lund-Kristensen, J

AU - Matzen, P

PY - 1982/9/1

Y1 - 1982/9/1

N2 - In a prospective study of 230 patients followed up for 5 years after hospital admission for acute non-specific abdominal pain, 21 patients (9 patients) could not be traced, and 11 (5 percent) had died. Only one death was related to symptoms from the first admission. Of the remaining 198 patients, 77 percent were healthy and free of any symptoms during the observation period. Fourteen patients (7 percent) had been hospitalized once more due to acute abdominal pain; 5 had acute appendicitis. The others had diagnosed recurrences of nonspecific abdominal pain. Sixteen percent complained of continuing of intermittent abdominal symptoms, mainly of benign colonic or gynecologic origin, while malignant disease developed in 1 percent (or 4 percent of patients over 50 years of age). It is concluded that control of these patients is generally unnecessary, but when symptoms recur further examinations, especially for colonic or gynecologic disease, should be carried out. In patients over 50 years old, the possibility of malignant disease should be kept in mind.

AB - In a prospective study of 230 patients followed up for 5 years after hospital admission for acute non-specific abdominal pain, 21 patients (9 patients) could not be traced, and 11 (5 percent) had died. Only one death was related to symptoms from the first admission. Of the remaining 198 patients, 77 percent were healthy and free of any symptoms during the observation period. Fourteen patients (7 percent) had been hospitalized once more due to acute abdominal pain; 5 had acute appendicitis. The others had diagnosed recurrences of nonspecific abdominal pain. Sixteen percent complained of continuing of intermittent abdominal symptoms, mainly of benign colonic or gynecologic origin, while malignant disease developed in 1 percent (or 4 percent of patients over 50 years of age). It is concluded that control of these patients is generally unnecessary, but when symptoms recur further examinations, especially for colonic or gynecologic disease, should be carried out. In patients over 50 years old, the possibility of malignant disease should be kept in mind.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 7114375

VL - 144

SP - 338

EP - 340

JO - American Journal of Surgery

JF - American Journal of Surgery

SN - 0002-9610

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 32645532