1.Abdominal Pain and Pelvic Mass.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2000;43(9):897-901
No abstract available.
Abdominal Pain*
2.Iatrogenic Abdominal Injury.
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 1998;22(2):85-90
Surgical operation or invasive diagnostic procedure may inflict unwanted mechanical injury on either tissue or organ. Iatrogenic injury is said that unwanted, accidental mechanical injury of the body, caused by surgical procedures. Rarely intraabdominal operation, spinal surgery or invasive diagnostic procedures can cause iatrogenic abdominal injury, which becomes the subject of a medicolegal investigation by prolonged treatment period, sequelae, and death.
Abdominal Injuries*
3.Methods in reconstruction of the abdominal wall defects.
Jae Seung LEE ; Kyung Won MINN ; Seong Chul LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 1993;20(4):767-775
No abstract available.
Abdominal Wall*
4.Lower Abdominal Pain.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 1999;42(8):800-804
No abstract available.
Abdominal Pain*
5.A clinical study of traumatic abdominal injuries.
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1992;43(3):407-418
No abstract available.
Abdominal Injuries*
6.Upper Abdominal Pain.
Seung Jae MYUNG ; Myung Hwan KIM
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 1998;41(3):330-335
No abstract available.
Abdominal Pain*
7.Recurrent Abdominal Pain.
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 2003;46(5):434-439
No abstract available.
Abdominal Pain*
8.Acute Low Abdominal Pain.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 1997;40(10):1357-1361
No abstract available.
Abdominal Pain*
9.Abdominal wall myofascial pain: still an unrecognized clinical entity.
Rohit BALYAN ; Saneep KHUBA ; Sujeet GAUTAM ; Anil AGARWAL ; Sanjay KUMAR
The Korean Journal of Pain 2017;30(4):308-309
No abstract available.
Abdominal Wall*
10.Mild-Aortic Syndrome : A Cause of Recurrent Abdominal Pain
Putri Yubbu ; Haifa Abdul Latiff ; Alan Sing
Malaysian Journal of Medicine and Health Sciences 2016;12(2):64-67
Mid-aortic syndrome (MAS) is a rare clinical entity that is
characterized by coarctation involving the distal thoracic and/or
abdominal aorta and its major branches accounting for 0.5–2%
of all cases of coarctation of the aorta (1). Renovascular
hypertension can be a significant sequelae - it is the main
symptomatic presentation of this disease among children and
adolescents. We describe a 9-year-old girl who presents with
recurrent abdominal pain and symptomatic hypertension. Due to
significant left ventricular systolic dysfunction and uncontrolled
hypertension, percutaneous balloon angioplasty was performed
to treat the coarctation. To our knowledge, this is the first
reported case of MAS in Malaysia. This case report highlights
the clinical presentation, the role of computed tomography
angiogram (CTA) in the diagnosis and current options in the
management of MAS.
Abdominal Pain