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Query: UMLS:C0002895 (
sickle cell disease
)
11,747
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hepatic dysfunction is a common finding in patients with
sickle cell disease
but viral hepatitis appears to be an unusual complication in the adult SS patient. Only five cases of viral hepatitis were recorded in 378 admissions for SS crisis. In contrast, hepatic crisis occurred as a distinct event in 9% of 88 patients with
sickle cell anemia
. This entity must be differentiated from acute cholecystitis or viral hepatitis. Transiently abnormal results of hepatitic function tests were observed in another 26 patients with extrahepatic crisis.
Cirrhosis
is relatively common and often the terminal event in SS disease. Choledocholithiasis and cholecystitis are infrequent complications despite the prevalence of gallstones in SS anemia.
...
PMID:Sickle cell hepatopathy. 87 Sep 77
Twenty-one cases of amoebiasis seen at autopsy at the University College Hospital, Ibadan, over a 10-year period are reviewed. They constituted 0.59 percent of 3,556 autopsies performed during this period. Delay in seeking medical advice and in diagnosis and commencement of appropriate therapy were some of the factors contributing to the mortality in 16 (76pc) cases. Furthermore, Chronic renal failure,
Cirrhosis
, Lymphoma, Pregnancy and
Sickle cell disease
were also contributory factors to mortality in 7 (33pc) cases. With the progressive deterioration of the economics of Nigeria, urban migration and the increasing size of urban slums with crowded unhygienic conditions, the spread of this infection may accelerate and so result in greater mortality in the future.
...
PMID:Amoebic cases at autopsy and factors that might have contributed to death at Ibadan. 228 32
In clinical studies, frequent hepatic dysfunction associated with crises in
sickle cell disease
has been noted, but whether irreversible morphologic changes arise from these transient episodes is uncertain. We studied 70 patients with
sickle cell disease
(57 SS, 12 SC and one S-thalassemia (S-thal) hemoglobin) autopsied at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. They ranged in age from five months to 75 years (average 21 years) and 35 (50 percent) were female, In 64 patients (91 percent), livers were enlarged and had distention of Kupffer cells with phagocytized sickled red cells; this was massive in 10. In 19 patients (27 percent) the sinusoids were markedly distended with sickled red cells and appeared obstructed. Focal parenchymal necroses were present in 24 patients (34 percent) and were explained in 12, eight by cardiac dysfunction and four by sepsis. Reparative changes, portal fibrosis and regenerative nodules were each found in 14 patients (20 percent), only one of whom had a known history of viral hepatitis despite the frequency of transfusions.
Cirrhosis
of unknown cause was present in seven patients and cardiac cirrhosis in one.
Cirrhosis
with hemochromatosis was present in three patients and 30 others had parenchymal iron accumulation. Thus, unexplained hepatic necroses, portal fibrosis, regenerative nodules and cirrhosis were frequently encountered in these patients. This spectrum of liver disease appears to be best understood as a consequence of recurrent vascular obstruction, necrosis and repair arising as a component of
sickle cell disease
.
...
PMID:The liver in sickle cell disease. A clinicopathologic study of 70 patients. 744 49
The expanding indications for transfusions in patients with
sickle cell disease
raise the issues of appropriate measurement of body iron burden and optimal timing of iron chelation therapy. In this study, we obtained 42 biopsy specimens from 20 patients with
sickle cell disease
(mean age, 15.7 years) who received transfusions. In 12 patients whose mean age was 11.3 years at the time of liver biopsy, hepatic iron concentration was measured to provide information about the rate of iron accumulation in
sickle cell disease
, as well as to guide the initiation of chelating therapy. Mean hepatic iron concentration after an average of 15.4 transfusions administered over 21 months was 9.4 +/- 1.2 mg/g liver, dry weight, which did not correlate significantly with determinations of serum transferrin or ferritin levels. On Initial liver biopsy, hepatic portal fibrosis was noted in 4 of 12 patients. Twenty-nine biopsies in 16 patients were performed after variable periods of treatment with deferoxamine. These 16 patients had received a mean of 38.5 transfusions over 4 years. Hepatic iron was 14.1 +/- 1.9 mg/g of liver, dry weight, Indicating poor control of body iron in many patients.
Cirrhosis
was reported in one of 29 and portal fibrosis in 10 biopsy specimens. Hepatic iron concentration in patients in whom fibrosis was observed varied from 8.9 to 37.7 mg/g of liver, dry weight. These data show that after 1 to 2 years of conventional transfusions, variable tissue iron concentrations and tissue damage are observed in patients with
sickle cell disease
. In some patients, iron chelation therapy may not be appropriate after 1 year of transfusions; in others, therapy is clearly indicated by this time to prevent tissue injury. The data also suggest that patients with
sickle cell disease
develop increased portal fibrosis at the thresholds previously described in young patients with thalassemia (approximately 7 mg/g of liver, dry weight).
...
PMID:Progression of iron overload in sickle cell disease. 1120 62
Pulmonary hypertension is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality of patients with sickle cell hemoglobinopathy (SCH). Although a clinically recognized complication of
sickle cell disease
(
SCD
), there are few published pathologic studies of pulmonary findings in these patients. The aim of this study was to define the pulmonary pathologic changes and to investigate correlation between the pathologic changes, the antemortem diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension, and the severity of SCH. Cases of SCH were identified from the autopsy database using Snomed codes. Clinical and echocardiograph data were collected for correlation with the pathologic data. A total of 20 adult patients (12 males and 8 females) were identified. Hemoglobin electrophoresis results were available for 16 patients, with hemoglobin S fraction percentages ranging from 23% to 97.8%. Eleven patients had
SCD
, 5 patients had sickle cell trait (SCT), and the remaining 4 patients without hemoglobin electrophoresis were included in the SCT group. The mean age of the SCT group was higher than that of the
SCD
group (P = 0.03). Histologically, all 20 patients demonstrated changes in pulmonary vasculature considered diagnostic of pulmonary hypertension grade I to grade IV, associated with plexiform lesions in 60% of patients. Medial hypertrophy and intimal hyperplasia/fibrosis, considered potentially reversible lesions, were seen in all patients. A weak association was found between
SCD
and plexiform lesions. Fibroelastic degeneration of small arteries, arterioles, and venules was identified in almost all (95%) cases. Clinically, tricuspid regurgitation was detected by echocardiogram in 10 of 20 (50%) patients; 6 of these 10 had significant regurgitation to allow estimation of systolic pressure. Sudden death occurred in 8 patients, with males having a significantly higher incidence. Cardiomegaly was present in 95% of patients, however, autosplenectomy and hepatic cirrhosis/hemochromatosis were observed almost exclusively in patients with
SCD
.
Cirrhosis
was found to have a strong positive association with
SCD
. This study demonstrates pulmonary hypertensive changes in all 20 autopsied patients who had SCH but died from various causes. We conclude that a high prevalence of pulmonary hypertension is associated with SCH with consequent high mortality. Therefore, patients with SCH would benefit from a regular periodic assessment for pulmonary hypertension regardless of age, sex, and severity of hemoglobinopathy.
...
PMID:Pulmonary hypertension in sickle cell hemoglobinopathy: a clinicopathologic study of 20 cases. 1239 78