Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001339 (acute pancreatitis)
10,593 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Indications for liver transplant in acute fulminating hepatitis (AFH) are predominantly affected by the high mortality of this spontaneous evolution (80-100%). At present patients with AFH have priority for transplant since they form part of the 0 emergency group according to the National Transplant Organisation. During the period between 1986 and the end of February 1992, a total of 254 liver transplants were performed in 202 patients (52 retransplants). In 26 patients (12.8%) (16 females and 10 males) the indication was fulminating acute hepatitis. Etiology was unknown in 20 patients, secondary to hepatitis B in 4 and to hepatitis A in 1, and was caused by isonazide ingestion in 1 case. The age limits were 3-60 years (X = 31.5 years). An isogroup graft was performed in 16 patients (61.5%), compatible in 3 (11.6%) and incompatible in 7 (26.9%). Due to anthropometric differences, a partial graft was used in 7 patients (26.9%); in 2 of the latter the graft was taken from the same donor ("split-liver"). Placement was always orthotopic with resection of the retrohepatic vena cava in 25 patients and its preservation in 1 (left lobe of split-liver). Peroperative (30 days) mortality was 23% (6/26); 2 due to cerebral death, 2 due to sepsis, 1 due to multisystemic insufficiency (MSI) and 1 due to acute pancreatitis. Four patients (15.3%) died some time after transplant; 1 after 5 months due to broncho-pulmonary complications, 1 after 7 months due to subacute hepatitis, 1 after 3 months due to respiratory failure and the last after 5 months due to anoxic encephalopathy and lung infection. Ten patients (39.4%) were re-transplanted; 4 following chronic rejection, 4 due to primary graft no function, 1 due to arterial thrombosis and 1 due to recurrent hepatitis (with cirrhosis). Two of the latter patients died intraoperatively due to coagulopathy and hemorrhage, and 3 following surgery (1 due to sepsis, 1 due to respiratory complications and 1 due to respiratory insufficiency). Two patients underwent a second re-transplant (1 due to chronic rejection and 1 due to recurrent hepatitis) and of these 1 died peroperatively due to sepsis and MSF. Overall mortality was therefore 61.5% (16/26) and the actuarial survival rate of 17 patients (10 living + 7 postoperative deaths) was 68% at 12 months and 52.9% at 36 months. Even if peroperative mortality is relatively high, liver transplant is currently the elective treatment for fulminating acute hepatitis.
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PMID:[The treatment of acute liver failure due to fulminating hepatitis by total or partial orthotopic liver transplantation. The clinical results]. 832 33