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Adhesions

Adhesions are bands of scar-like tissue. Normally, internal tissues and organs have slippery surfaces so they can shift easily as the body moves. Adhesions cause tissues and organs to stick together. They might connect the loops of the intestines to each other, to nearby organs, or to the wall of the abdomen. They can pull sections of the intestines out of place. This may block food from passing through the intestine.

Adhesions can occur anywhere in the body. But they often form after surgery on the abdomen. Almost everyone who has surgery on the abdomen gets adhesions. Some adhesions don't cause any problems. But when they partly or completely block the intestines, they cause symptoms such as:

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Results 1 - 10 of 228 for Abdominal adhesions
  1. Adhesions (National Library of Medicine)  
    Adhesions are bands of scar-like tissue. Normally, internal tissues and organs have slippery surfaces so they can shift easily as the body moves. Adhesions cause tissues and organs to stick together. They ...
  2. Leukocyte adhesion deficiency type 1 is a disorder that causes the immune system to malfunction, resulting in a form of immunodeficiency. Immunodeficiencies are ...
  3. Adhesions are bands of scar-like tissue that form between two surfaces inside the body and cause ... surfaces. Inflammation (swelling), surgery, or injury can cause adhesions to form and prevent this movement. Adhesions can ...
  4. Abdominal Adhesions From the National Institutes of Health (National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases)  
    Adhesions/Start Here ... Adhesions ... National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases ... From the National Institutes of Health ... Describes how abdominal ...
  5. Labial Adhesions (Nemours Foundation)  
    Vulvar Disorders/Children ... Vulvar Disorders ... Adhesions/Children ... Adhesions ... Nemours Foundation ... labial adhesions, UTIs, labial fusion, labial agglutination, synechia ...
  6. Labial Adhesions: A Guide for Parents (Boston Children's Hospital)  
    Adhesions/Children ... Adhesions ... Vulvar Disorders/Children ... Vulvar Disorders ... Boston Children's Hospital
  7. ... to surgery may also lead to Asherman syndrome. Adhesions in the uterine cavity can also form after ... The adhesions may cause: Amenorrhea (lack of menstrual periods) Repeated miscarriages Infertility However, such symptoms could be related to ...
  8. ... in the attachment of cells to one another (adhesion) and cell movement. In glial cells, GlialCAM attaches ( ... More About This Health Condition FLJ25530 glial cell adhesion molecule GlialCAM HECAM_HUMAN hepatocyte and glial cell ...
  9. ... gene provides instructions for producing the L1 cell adhesion molecule protein (shortened to L1 protein), which is ... these cells stick to one another (cell-cell adhesion).The L1 protein plays a role in the ...
  10. ... help neighboring cells stick to one another (cell adhesion) to form organized tissues. Another protein called p120- ... proteins. In addition to its role in cell adhesion, E-cadherin is involved in transmitting chemical signals ...
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