Disease | peritonitis |
Symptom | C0015967|fever |
Sentences | 6 |
PubMedID- 19190935 | As noted previously, the severity of the presentation of abdominal pain and fever in patients with peritonitis varies and is somewhat organism-specific; for example, the severity is generally mild–moderate with culture-negative peritonitis and peritonitis secondary to coagulase-negative staphylococcus, whereas it is of greater severity with peritonitis resulting from streptococcus, gram-negative organisms, s. aureus, and fungi. |
PubMedID- 26413094 | fever in 78% of patients, peritonitis symptoms in 95%, pleuritis in 59%, arthritis in 32%, arthralgia in 60%, erysipelas-like skin rash in 23%, vasculitis in 8% have been reported. |
PubMedID- 26041091 | Surgery was successful, but on post-operative day 2, the patient developed signs of peritonitis, with pain, fever, and elevated markers of inflammation. |
PubMedID- 22851068 | Two patients developed abdominal pain and fever, one of whom had regional peritonitis and was managed by fasting and intravenous antibiotics. |
PubMedID- 26155216 | Above-mentioned complications occurred in a period of time that spanned from the immediate postoperative period (peritonitis with accompanying fever and abdominal distention) to two and half year after the operation (umbilical fistula). |
PubMedID- 20301405 | The diagnosis of fmf is suspected in individuals with recurrent episodes of fever associated with abdominal pain (peritonitis) and/or pleuritic pain and/or arthritis (ankle/knee) usually lasting two to three days. |
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