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

In a patient with septic fever and elevated alkaline phosphatase an ERC was conducted to explore the biliary system. Contrast media could be demonstrated within the hepatic parenchyma, establishing the diagnosis of a liver abscess in communication with the intrahepatic biliary system.
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PMID:Demonstration of a liver abscess by ERC. 40 9

A patient with liver abscess in association with regional enteritis is reported. Liver abscess should be suspected in patients with regional enteritis who present with fever, elevated serum alkaline phosphatase, liver tenderness, right upper quadrant pain or hepatomegaly.
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PMID:Liver abscess. A complication of regional enteritis. 50 33

Eighty-eight African patients with amoebic liver abscess are described. The diagnosis was readily made in pyrexial patients who had right-sided upper abdominal pain, an enlarged, very tender liver and signs at the right base. However, in apyrexial subjects (10%) and where abdominal pain was absent (7%), the diagnosis was considerably delayed. Five children (7%) were seen under the age of five, four of whom died because the diagnosis was not suspected. It is particularly emphasized that there should be a greater awareness of this condition in this age group. Amoebae were found in only a small percentage of stool (14%) and pus specimens (11%), while biopsy of the abscess edge yielded 40%. The relative values of a positive amoebic latex test (82%) and an elevated alkaline phosphatase (71%) are noted. In only half the aspirations was the classical anchovy sauce appearance seen. Metronidazole is the drug of choice with repeated aspirations for large abscesses. Mortality was 13-5%, occurring mainly in the extremes of life.
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PMID:Amoebic liver abscess in Rhodesian Africans. 100 58

A 59-year-old woman who had undergone a Whipple's operation for carcinoma of the head of the pancreas, developed septic fever of up to 40 degrees C on the fourth postoperative day, accompanied by severe upper abdominal pain and local guarding on palpation over the liver. Her general condition markedly and quickly deteriorated. Liver abscess was suspected. Computed tomography demonstrated a hypodense, wedge-shaped lesion in the right lobe of the liver without any abscess capsule. Liver infarction was diagnosed when injection of contrast medium failed to show any increase in density. Magnetic resonance imaging confirmed the wedge-shaped signal-rich lesion. Laboratory tests revealed a leucocytosis of 30,000/microliters, a postoperative rise in serum alkaline phosphatase activity (up to 800 U/l), gamma-glutamyl transaminase (up to 190 U/l) and lactate dehydrogenase (up to 320 U/l), while GOT and GPT activities remained within normal limits throughout. Fever subsided within 3 weeks. --It is stressed that, if a patient's condition worsens after a major abdominal operation, liver infarction should be considered in the differential diagnosis. Modern imaging methods have increased the frequency of this diagnosis. They, together with the clinical picture and the pattern of biochemical tests, make it possible to distinguish reliably infarction from liver abscess.
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PMID:[Liver infarction after Whipple's surgery. Diagnosis based on clinical course and imaging procedures]. 134 77

Seventy-three patients with pyogenic liver abscess during the year 1978-1988 were studied in the Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital. The overall mortality rate was 19.2% in this study. By using univariate analysis, it was revealed that clinical jaundice, pleural effusion, bilobar abscess, profound hypoalbuminemia (less than 2.5 g/dl), hyperbilirubinemia (less than 2 mg/dl), elevated level of serum AST (greater than 100 IU/L), alkaline phosphatase (greater than 150 IU/L), and marked leukocytosis (greater than 20,000 mm3) were associated with a higher mortality rate. Multivariate stepwise logistic regression analysis detected only 3 factors of marked leukocytosis (greater than 20,000 mm3), profound hypoalbuminemia (less than 2.5 g/dl), and presence of pleural effusion with independent significance in predicting mortality. Meanwhile, it was also revealed that the laboratory data could not predict a risk factor to mortality unless they became markedly abnormal.
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PMID:Pyogenic liver abscess: multivariate analysis of risk factors. 185 16

This is a retrospective study of 27 consecutive patients with a diagnosis of pyogenic liver abscess (PLA) seen over a period of 7 years. There were 10 males and 17 females whose ages ranged from 5 to 86 years (mean 56). Fever, abdominal pain and vomiting were the commonest symptoms, and abdominal tenderness was the commonest physical finding. An elevated alkaline phosphatase was seen in 78% of all patients and was the commonest biochemical abnormality. Biliary disease accounted for a third of all cases, and in 22% of the patients the abscesses were considered to be idiopathic. Ultrasonography and/or CT scanning was employed in the diagnosis and follow-up of all patients. Percutaneous needle aspiration (PNA) and percutaneous drainage (PCD) under ultrasound or CT guidance was employed as the primary therapy in 24 patients. The procedure failed in 5 patients (18.5%), there was 1 complication (3.7%) and no deaths were seen as a result of these procedures. Three patients (11%) ultimately died of their abscesses. This study emphasizes the important role of percutaneous drainage as a complementary form of therapy to surgical drainage in the management of pyogenic liver abscesses.
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PMID:Pyogenic liver abscess: a 7-year experience in a large community hospital. 193 79

Amebic liver abscess is increasingly common in the United States, particularly in the West and Southwest, due to increased immigration from Southeast Asia, Mexico, and Central America. The presentation, course, and treatment of 50 patients treated for amebic liver abscess at a county-community hospital in San Jose, California, between 1974 and 1988 is reviewed. The typical patient is an immigrant, usually a Hispanic male, 20-40 yr old, who presents with fever, right upper quadrant pain, leukocytosis, abnormal serum transaminases and alkaline phosphatase, and a defect on hepatic imaging study. Available serologic testing (i.e., indirect hemagglutinin antibody) is sensitive and confirms the diagnosis. Most patients respond rapidly and completely to oral metronidazole. The data, compared with other studies, indicate no major change in presentation or management, except for decreasing need to aspirate the abscess for diagnosis.
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PMID:Amebic liver abscess: a 15-year experience. 203 92

The medical records of 222 patients with liver abscess at Siriraj Hospital from 1978 to 1985 were analysed. Amoebic abscess was three times more prevalent than pyogenic abscess. In both groups middle aged males were affected more often than others. The main clinical manifestations were fever, right upper quadrant pain and hepatomegaly. History of colitis in the past, marked leukocytosis, elevation of alkaline phosphatase and a single abscess confined to the right lobe were suggestive of amoebic liver abscess. The presence of concurrent abdominal infection, marked anemia and jaundice were associated with pyogenic abscess. Patients with pyogenic abscess developed complications more often and the case fatality rate was greater than patients with amoebic abscess. Most of the patients were successfully treated with a combination of antimicrobials and drainage.
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PMID:Liver abscess: a clinical study of 222 patients. 221 15

Pyogenic liver abscess is an uncommon condition which carries substantial morbidity and mortality if untreated. A review was undertaken of 31 patients who were admitted to the Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH) between January 1980 and December 1987 and who were diagnosed as having pyogenic liver abscess. The aims of the study were to review the aetiology, current methods of investigation and treatment of the disease, and to formulate a management plan based on the findings. Hypoalbuminaemia, leukocytosis and elevated alkaline phosphatase were the most common findings. Hyperbilirubinaemia was not a usual feature. Computerised tomography (CT) scanning and ultrasound were the most useful imaging modalities in identification of the abscess. The sensitivity of CT scanning in evaluating the size of abscesses was lower than anticipated and this may lead to a higher than necessary rate of surgical drainage. A case is presented to illustrate this. Most abscesses were secondary and frequently due to extension of infection from biliary structures. Diseases causing diminished resistance to bacterial infection had a significant role in the pathogenesis. The overall mortality rate was 25%. Risk factors increasing mortality included advanced age, multiplicity of abscesses, depressed immune status and the presence of complications due to the abscess. Of patients who survived, four were treated with antibiotics alone, eleven with percutaneous drainage and antibiotics, and eight with surgery and antibiotics. We conclude that patients with hepatic abscesses should be managed initially by CT or ultrasound-guided aspiration. If pus is obtained a percutaneous drain should be inserted into the cavity and systemic antibiotics administered.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Review of pyogenic liver abscess at the Royal Adelaide Hospital 1980-1987. 224 50

A retrospective study of 18 adults admitted to Meir General Hospital with pyogenic liver abscess during the years 1982-88 was conducted. Our most useful diagnostic tool was ultrasound, which was accurate in all 15 patients in whom it was performed. Only two patients presented with multiple abscesses. Increased alkaline phosphatase was the most predictive laboratory finding, seen in all but one patient. One person was treated conservatively by antibiotics only. In one patient the abscess drained spontaneously into the right thoracic cavity. Initial surgical drainage was done in nine patients and percutaneous catheter drainage in seven. Only one patient died, of septic shock, yielding a mortality rate of 5.5%. The treatment-related complication rate, observed in almost half of the patients, was high. All patients with such complications required repeated drainage, which was achieved surgically in all cases.
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PMID:Pyogenic liver abscess. 224 31


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