Relationship Between Family History, Bloody Stool, Palpable Mass, Anemia and MSCT Abdomen and Kolon Carsinoma Cross-Sectional Study at Dr.Kariadi General Hospital in 2016

Main Authors: Malik, Ricat Hinaywan, Winarto, Winarto, Budijitno, Selamat, Sadhana, Udadi, Prajoko, Yan Wisnu
Format: Article info application/pdf Journal
Bahasa: eng
Terbitan: Fakultas Kedokteran; Universitas Islam Sultan Agung (UNISSULA) , 2018
Subjects:
Online Access: http://jurnal.unissula.ac.id/index.php/sainsmedika/article/view/2264
http://jurnal.unissula.ac.id/index.php/sainsmedika/article/view/2264/pdf
ctrlnum article-2264
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0"?> <dc schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><title lang="en-US">Relationship Between Family History, Bloody Stool, Palpable Mass, Anemia and MSCT Abdomen and Kolon Carsinoma Cross-Sectional Study at Dr.Kariadi General Hospital in 2016</title><title lang="id-ID">RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FAMILY HISTORY, BLOODY STOOL, PALPABLE MASS, ANEMIA, AND MSCT ABDOMEN AND KOLON CARSINOMA Cross-Sectional Study at Dr.Kariadi General Hospital in 2016</title><creator>Malik, Ricat Hinaywan</creator><creator>Winarto, Winarto</creator><creator>Budijitno, Selamat</creator><creator>Sadhana, Udadi</creator><creator>Prajoko, Yan Wisnu</creator><subject lang="en-US">predictors;diagnosis;family history;bloody stool;palpable mass;anemia;MSCT abdomen;colon carcinoma</subject><subject lang="id-ID">Predictors; diagnosis; family history; bloody stool, palpable mass; anemia; MSCT abdomen; colon carcinoma</subject><description lang="en-US">Background: Colon cancer, a colorectal cancer, is the third most common epithelial malignancy in the world. Family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, anemia, and abdominal MSCT are symptoms and signs of colon carcinoma.Objective: To determine the relationship between the 5 variables and the incidence of colon carcinoma at Dr. Kariadi Hospital, Semarang in 2016.Methods: a Cross-sectional observational analytical study using medical record (RM) and complementary primary data. The inclusion criteria werethe complete medical record, and clinical diagnosis of suspected colon carcinoma. Data obtained from the department of Anatomy Pathology/PA (11,794PA results) were traced to the medical record section (46 patients with suspected colon carcinoma). The incomplete data were confirmed by: contacting the patient/family, obtaining the archive in the laboratory and radiology resulting in 27 patients meeting the inclusion criteria. Analysis was done using chi-square test, Spearman-Kendall bivariate correlation, and logistic regression.Results: Abdominal MSCT was moderately associated with colon carcinoma (p = 0.003; r = 0.488), while family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, and anemia were not associated with colon cancer. Analysis between predictors of outcome: Bloody stool was moderately associated with anemia (p = 0.006; r = 0.411), and anemia was weakly associated MSCT (p = 0.035; r = 0.351). Abdominal MSCT was the predictive factor for colon carcinoma (p = 0.021).Conclusion: Abdominal MSCT was found to be associated with the incidence of colon carcinoma. Bloody stool was associated with anemia, and anemia was associated with abdominal MSCT. MSCT was the predictive factor for colon cancer.</description><description lang="id-ID">Background: Colon cancer, a colorectal cancer, is the third most common epithelial malignancy in the world. Family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, anemia, and abdominal MSCT are symptoms and signs of colon carcinoma. Objective: To determine the relationship between the 5 variables and the incidence of colon carcinoma at Dr. Kariadi Hospital, Semarang in 2016.Methods: a Cross-sectional observational analytical study using medical record (RM) and complementary primary data. The inclusion criteria were the complete medical record, and clinical diagnosis of suspected colon carcinoma. Data obtained from the department of Anatomy Pathology/PA (11,794 PA results) were traced to the medical record section (46 patients with suspected colon carcinoma). The incomplete data were confirmed by: contacting the patient/family, obtaining the archive in the laboratory and radiology resulting in 27 patients meeting the inclusion criteria. Analysis was done using chi-square test, Spearman-Kendall bivariate correlation, and logistic regression.Results: Abdominal MSCT was moderately associated with colon carcinoma (p = 0.003; r = 0.488), while family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, and anemia were not associated with colon cancer. Analysis between predictors of outcome: Bloody stool was moderately associated with anemia (p = 0.006; r = 0.411), and anemia was weakly associated MSCT (p = 0.035; r = 0.351). Abdominal MSCT was the predictive factor for colon carcinoma (p = 0.021).Conclusion: Abdominal MSCT was found to be associated with the incidence of colon carcinoma. Bloody stool was associated with anemia, and anemia was associated with abdominal MSCT. MSCT was the predictive factor for colon cancer.</description><publisher lang="en-US">Fakultas Kedokteran; Universitas Islam Sultan Agung (UNISSULA)</publisher><contributor lang="en-US"/><contributor lang="id-ID"/><date>2018-11-11</date><type>Journal:Article</type><type>Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion</type><type>Other:</type><type>File:application/pdf</type><identifier>http://jurnal.unissula.ac.id/index.php/sainsmedika/article/view/2264</identifier><identifier>10.26532/sainsmed.v9i1.2264</identifier><source lang="en-US">Sains Medika: Jurnal Kedokteran dan Kesehatan; Vol 9, No 1 (2018): January - June 2018</source><source>2339-093X</source><source>2085-1545</source><source>10.26532/sainsmed.v9i1</source><language>eng</language><relation>http://jurnal.unissula.ac.id/index.php/sainsmedika/article/view/2264/pdf</relation><rights lang="en-US">Copyright (c) 2018 Sains Medika</rights><rights lang="en-US">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</rights><recordID>article-2264</recordID></dc>
language eng
format Journal:Article
Journal
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author Malik, Ricat Hinaywan
Winarto, Winarto
Budijitno, Selamat
Sadhana, Udadi
Prajoko, Yan Wisnu
title Relationship Between Family History, Bloody Stool, Palpable Mass, Anemia and MSCT Abdomen and Kolon Carsinoma Cross-Sectional Study at Dr.Kariadi General Hospital in 2016
publisher Fakultas Kedokteran; Universitas Islam Sultan Agung (UNISSULA)
publishDate 2018
topic predictors
diagnosis
family history
bloody stool
palpable mass
anemia
MSCT abdomen
colon carcinoma
Predictors; diagnosis; family history; bloody stool
palpable mass; anemia; MSCT abdomen; colon carcinoma
url http://jurnal.unissula.ac.id/index.php/sainsmedika/article/view/2264
http://jurnal.unissula.ac.id/index.php/sainsmedika/article/view/2264/pdf
contents Background: Colon cancer, a colorectal cancer, is the third most common epithelial malignancy in the world. Family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, anemia, and abdominal MSCT are symptoms and signs of colon carcinoma.Objective: To determine the relationship between the 5 variables and the incidence of colon carcinoma at Dr. Kariadi Hospital, Semarang in 2016.Methods: a Cross-sectional observational analytical study using medical record (RM) and complementary primary data. The inclusion criteria werethe complete medical record, and clinical diagnosis of suspected colon carcinoma. Data obtained from the department of Anatomy Pathology/PA (11,794PA results) were traced to the medical record section (46 patients with suspected colon carcinoma). The incomplete data were confirmed by: contacting the patient/family, obtaining the archive in the laboratory and radiology resulting in 27 patients meeting the inclusion criteria. Analysis was done using chi-square test, Spearman-Kendall bivariate correlation, and logistic regression.Results: Abdominal MSCT was moderately associated with colon carcinoma (p = 0.003; r = 0.488), while family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, and anemia were not associated with colon cancer. Analysis between predictors of outcome: Bloody stool was moderately associated with anemia (p = 0.006; r = 0.411), and anemia was weakly associated MSCT (p = 0.035; r = 0.351). Abdominal MSCT was the predictive factor for colon carcinoma (p = 0.021).Conclusion: Abdominal MSCT was found to be associated with the incidence of colon carcinoma. Bloody stool was associated with anemia, and anemia was associated with abdominal MSCT. MSCT was the predictive factor for colon cancer.
Background: Colon cancer, a colorectal cancer, is the third most common epithelial malignancy in the world. Family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, anemia, and abdominal MSCT are symptoms and signs of colon carcinoma. Objective: To determine the relationship between the 5 variables and the incidence of colon carcinoma at Dr. Kariadi Hospital, Semarang in 2016.Methods: a Cross-sectional observational analytical study using medical record (RM) and complementary primary data. The inclusion criteria were the complete medical record, and clinical diagnosis of suspected colon carcinoma. Data obtained from the department of Anatomy Pathology/PA (11,794 PA results) were traced to the medical record section (46 patients with suspected colon carcinoma). The incomplete data were confirmed by: contacting the patient/family, obtaining the archive in the laboratory and radiology resulting in 27 patients meeting the inclusion criteria. Analysis was done using chi-square test, Spearman-Kendall bivariate correlation, and logistic regression.Results: Abdominal MSCT was moderately associated with colon carcinoma (p = 0.003; r = 0.488), while family history, bloody stool, palpable mass, and anemia were not associated with colon cancer. Analysis between predictors of outcome: Bloody stool was moderately associated with anemia (p = 0.006; r = 0.411), and anemia was weakly associated MSCT (p = 0.035; r = 0.351). Abdominal MSCT was the predictive factor for colon carcinoma (p = 0.021).Conclusion: Abdominal MSCT was found to be associated with the incidence of colon carcinoma. Bloody stool was associated with anemia, and anemia was associated with abdominal MSCT. MSCT was the predictive factor for colon cancer.
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