Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The presenting features, modes of treatment and clinical course were reviewed for 55 patients with pyogenic liver abscess, seen at Duke University Medical Center over a 15-year period. Thirty-three patients had a solitary abscess and 22 had multiple abscesses. Most patients were between the ages of 40 and 60 years. Males predominated, 2.4:1. Major underlying conditions included biliary tract disease, malignancy and colonic disease. Eight patients, each with a solitary abscess, had no identifiable underlying condition. Symptoms and signs were nonspecific: fever, chills, focal abdominal tenderness and hepatomegaly were common. A raised serum alkaline phosphatase level was the most consistent abnormal laboratory finding. CT with contrast enhancement, radioisotope scanning and ultrasonography all accurately defined solitary hepatic abscesses. However, CT scan was more successful than other imaging techniques in detecting multiple abscesses. In seven patients the diagnosis was made only at laparotomy. Overall, a diagnosis of liver abscess was made in 50 living patients (91%). Microorganisms were recovered from pus and/or blood cultures of 44 patients (80%). Most common were enteric gram-negative facultative rods, anaerobic gram-negative rods, and microaerophilic streptococci. Single abscesses were more likely than multiple abscesses to contain more than one organism. All patients received antibiotics; the choice of antibiotic does not appear to be critical provided the regimen has a broad spectrum including activity against anaerobes. Surgical or percutaneous drainage was successful when attempted in all patients with a single abscess, but the outcome was less favorable in those with multiple abscesses. Percutaneous drainage is currently replacing open operative drainage as the method of choice. Overall mortality in patients with single abscesses was 15% (5/33) and in those with multiple abscesses 41% (9/22).
...
PMID:Single and multiple pyogenic liver abscesses. Natural history, diagnosis and treatment, with emphasis on percutaneous drainage. 647 91

The cholangiograms of 36 patients with sclerosing cholangitis were reviewed. The mean age of the patient group was 43 years, and the mean disease duration was 4.5 years. Seventeen of the patients had associated inflammatory bowel disease. The mean serum bilirubin was 6.8 mg/dl, the mean SGOT was 105 IU/L, the mean SGPT was 108 IU/L, and the mean serum alkaline phosphatase was 534 IU/L. The cholangiograms demonstrated involvement of the extrahepatic bile ducts in 33 patients, involvement of the hepatic duct bifurcation in 33 patients, and involvement of the intrahepatic bile ducts in 35 patients. The cholangiograms were graded as to the areas of the most severe obstructive involvement. In 24 patients the area of most severe involvement was the hepatic duct bifurcation. In eight additional patients the hepatic duct bifurcation, along with the extrahepatic ducts and/or the intrahepatic ducts, were felt to be the areas most severely affected. This predilection for severe obstructive disease at the hepatic duct bifurcation in sclerosing cholangitis held for both patients with and without inflammatory bowel disease. Thus, most patients with sclerosing cholangitis have cholangiographic evidence of diffuse extrahepatic and intrahepatic biliary tract disease, with the hepatic duct bifurcation being the area generally most severely affected.
...
PMID:Sclerosing cholangitis. Anatomical distribution of obstructive lesions. 673 27

Post-traumatic acalculous cholecystitis is a potentially lethal complication that may develop in patients during hospitalization for trauma. Three case reports illustrate that obscuration of many early diagnostic symptoms and signs may make this complication particularly treacherous in the neurosurgical patient. Suspicion should be aroused by unexplained fever, leukocytosis, elevated serum bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase values, and developing intolerance to oral or tube feedings. There may be a rapid progression to signs of an acute abdominal condition. Symptoms are most likely to occur 1 week to 1 month after the episode of trauma. Patients of all ages are susceptible. Diagnosis is best confirmed by noninvasive iminodiacetic acid hepatobiliary scanning accompanied by ultrasound or abdominal computed tomographic scanning. The treatment of choice is emergency cholecystectomy. The cause is most likely multifactorial and is probably related to hypotension, sepsis, or biliary stasis with subsequent cystic duct obstruction. Although this disease is rare, its incidence is apparently increasing, and a high index of suspicion is warranted in the neurosurgeon involved in the care of the biliary tract disorder.
...
PMID:Post-traumatic acalculous cholecystitis on a neurosurgical service. 682 28

A review of pyogenic liver abscess at the University of Alabama in Birmingham revealed 29 cases, of which 22 were single and seven were multiple. Etiology was cryptogenic in 11, secondary to biliary tract disease in seven, trauma in six, and pyelophlebitis in four, and secondary infection in a primary neoplasm in one. No single set of specific diagnostic criteria could be elucidated, but fever occurred in every patient. Leukocytosis, hypoalbuminemia, and elevated alkaline phosphatase were present in more than 80 per cent of patients. Other clinical findings and routine laboratory abnormalities were less consistently present. In suspect patients, a technetium-99 scan was positive in 18 of 19. Ten patients died, including six of seven with multiple abscesses, seven of seven with positive abscess and blood cultures, and seven of 11 in whom liver abscess was not suspected prior to operation or autopsy. Diagnosis demands a high index of suspicion, in patients in whom suggestive factors are present, and liberal use of the technetium-99 scan. Successful treatment requires exploratory laparotomy, with care of discern any underlying septic focus or the presence of multiple abscesses, and wide drainage of the abscesses, as well as vigorous supportive care and appropriate antibiotics.
...
PMID:Pyogenic hepatic abscesses. 707 23

After major surgery some patients, especially those with an infectiouss process or sepsis, develop jaundice which has been called reactive hepatitis, toxic hepatitis, septic hepatitis or benign postoperative cholestasis; these terms do not have a very precise connotation. Eighty patients with postoperative sepsis and jaundice where studied, excluding those with liver or biliary tract disease, hepato-toxic drugs or repeated halogenated anesthetics. All of them had complete laboratory tests, cultures and percutaneous liver biopsy when it was feasible. Thirty five patients were submitted to percutaneous liver biopsy and they are the material for this paper. There was no correlation with the type and duration of the operation, postoperative complications, shock or kind of anesthesia. The main laboratory changes were leukocytosis, neutrophilia, elevation of the bilirubins mainly the direct type and increase of the alkaline phosphatase; transaminases were within normal limits. Cultures were positive in 76% of the cases predominating E. coli, Pseudomonas a. and Proteus, anaerobics were present in 22.8% of the cases. The liver biopsy showed lymphoctic infiltration, hyperplasia of the Kupffer cells, hepatic regeneration and turbid tumefaction; pericholangitis, focal necrosis, retention of pigment and steatosis were less frequent. We consider that the best denomination of these complications is benign postoperative cholestasis.
...
PMID:[Postoperative reactive hepatitis in the septic patient]. 728 Apr 56

To ascertain the best diagnostic indicators of choledocholithiasis and to decrease the incidence of retained stones in the common bile duct after exploration, the authors carried out a retrospective review of 110 consecutive patients who underwent common bile duct exploration for calculous biliary tract disease. Conditions that were most often associated with choledocholithiasis were cholangitis and clinically obvious jaundice. The serum bilirubin level was helpful in identifying patients with stones in the common bile duct only when the value was greater than 6 mg/dl (103 mumol/l), and alkaline phosphatase only when the value was more than 250 IU (normal 110 IU). When stones are felt in the duct at operation, the diagnosis of choledocholithiasis is certain; positive operative cholangiograms are highly reliable and the coexistence of small gallstones and a dilated cystic duct is suggestive. The retention of stones is best prevented by careful exploration followed by high-quality T-tube cholangiography performed at operation after the exploration is complete. Any missed stones found in this way should be removed by re-exploration at the time of the original operation. Stones left in the common bile duct are best extracted nonoperatively under radiologic control. This technique, while effective and safe, is associated with considerable morbidity.
...
PMID:Common bile duct exploration: indications and results. 728 6

This report presents eight patients with dilatation of the biliary tree, six of whom had no clinical or laboratory evidence of biliary tract disease except for elevated levels of serum alkaline phosphatase. In two patients, dilatation was caused by obstruction of only one hepatic duct; in three, it was caused by a pancreatic tumor; and in three, it was associated with gallstones which exercised a ball-valve effect, producing intermittent obstruction. The elevation of the alkaline phosphatase level in six of these patients suggests that it is a more sensitive indicator of biliary tract obstruction than the serum bilirubin level is. The recognition of biliary dilatation in one or both lobes of the liver should lead to a careful examination, with ultrasound or another modality, of the porta hepatis, common bile duct, and pancreas.
...
PMID:Ultrasound demonstration of anicteric dilatation of the biliary tree. 735 19

Thirteen patients with amebic liver abscess and 26 with pyogenic abscess were identified during a 10 year period. All but one patient with an amebic abscess had emigrated or traveled to areas where amebiasis was endemic. Half of the patients in whom pyogenic abscesses developed had debilitating disease and anemia. Factors predisposing to multiple rather than solitary hepatic abscess were biliary tract disease before surgery, cancer, chemotherapy, steroid administration and alcoholism. Elevated levels of alkaline phosphatase and hypoalbuminemia were present in most patients. Three patients with amebic abscess died, two of whom has massive gastrointestinal hemorrhage from associated amebic colitis. No patient with a solitary pyogenic liver abscess died. Fifteen of 16 patients with multiple liver abscesses died. Failure to consider the diagnosis of liver abscess, confusion over interpretation of the scan, failure to operate or provide a timely operation and failure to adequately explore the abdomen or identify all abscesses were factors responsible for eight unnecessary deaths.
...
PMID:Management of liver abscess. 739 87

Pyogenic hepatic abscesses are uncommon. We report our findings in 51 patients with pyogenic liver abscess treated from 1975 through 1992. Twenty-eight patients were men and twenty-three were women. The median age of patients was 46 years (range, 13 to 77 years). Fever was present in 100% of patients, abdominal pain in 58.8% and jaundice in 39.2%. Twenty eight patients (54.9%) had leukocytosis; 45% hyperbilirrubinemia and 35.3% a high serum level of alkaline phosphatase. The most common cause of abscesses was biliary tract disease (66%). Thirty-three (64.7%) were surgically treated and thirteen underwent percutaneous drainage with 90.4% and 69.2% of good results, respectively. Mortality was 9.6% in the surgical group and 0% in the percutaneously drained group. A review of literature of this condition and a discussion about the diagnosis, treatment and etiopathogenesis are presented.
...
PMID:[Pyogenic hepatic abscess: report of 51 cases]. 761 Mar 34

Elevated serum enzyme values are often the earliest indicators of liver injury in asymptomatic patients. Abnormal AST and ALT point to a hepatocyte disorder; abnormal alkaline phosphatase suggests a biliary tract disorder. Selected case histories illustrate how the three enzyme levels, in conjunction with the history and physical examination, can guide the rest of the workup.
...
PMID:Approach to the patient with abnormal liver enzymes. 796 34


<< Previous 1 2 3 Next >>