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Target Concepts:
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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)
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.
...
PMID:Pyogenic liver abscess: a 7-year experience in a large community hospital. 193 79
Within 1 year six elderly patients (aged 80-89 years) were admitted because of non-specific deterioration in mental or physical well-being. In no instance was hepatobiliary disease suspected at the time of hospital admission. One patient presented with intermittent confusion only. The other five were referred with "falls" or having "gone off legs", with malaise, confusion, or incontinence. All had raised
alkaline phosphatase
levels of 159-1230 IU/l, which led to investigation of the biliary tree. At endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography all were shown to have biliary disease (three common duct stones, one gallbladder calculus, one an abscess, and one a widely dilated common bileduct ). With appropriate treatment (endoscopic sphincterotomy for two, surgery for two, and antibiotics alone for two), all showed a gratifying return of mobility and mental function.
Biliary disease
is a treatable cause of chronic ill health in the elderly and should be excluded, even in the absence of "classical" symptoms, when there is abnormal liver function.
...
PMID:Gallstones presenting as mental and physical debility in the elderly. 614 85
We prospectively studied 21 consecutive patients with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction for evidence of biliary tract disease. Two patients were first seen with extrahepatic cholestasis; another had recurrent cholangitis. All three patients with clinically manifest biliary disease were adults. Another five patients had icterus on clinical examination. Liver function tests revealed elevated bilirubin levels in 14 patients (66.6%), elevated
alkaline phosphatase
levels in 17 (80.9%) and elevated serum ALT levels in 8 (38.0%). Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography revealed abnormal findings in 17 patients (80.9%). The changes involved the common bile duct (66.6%) more often than they did the hepatic bile ducts (38.1%). Cholangiographic abnormalities included strictures (52.4%), caliber irregularity (23.8%), segmental upstream dilatation (42.8%), ectasia (9.5%), collateral veins causing extraluminal bile duct impressions (14.3%), displacement of ducts (9.5%), angulation of ducts (4.7%) and pruning of intrahepatic ducts (9.5%). The pathogenesis of such cholangiographic abnormalities is unknown. However, possible factors in such changes include collateral veins bridging the blocked portal vein, causing bile duct impressions; fibrous scarring of porta hepatis, causing angulation of bile duct; and ischemic injury to bile duct, leading to stricture formation and caliber irregularity.
Biliary disease
is important in the clinical outcome of patients with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction because variceal sclerotherapy has prolonged the life expectancies of such patients.
...
PMID:Biliary abnormalities associated with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction. 813 48