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Query: UMLS:C0008370 (
cholestasis
)
9,378
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-seven patients were prospectively studied using grey scale ultrasound (GSU) to assess its possible role as part of a jaundice investigation programme. All scans were performed by one radiologist, without clinical information. When intrahepatic ductal dilatation was found an attempt was made to establish the level and cause of obstruction. The calibre of the intrahepatic bile ducts was correctly reported in 66 patients (98 per cent). Forty-three proved to have extrahepatic
cholestasis
, 24 had intrahepatic
cholestasis
. No patient with intrahepatic
cholestasis
had dilated ducts seen on ultrasound. In 43 patients with
obstructive jaundice
, GSU accurately detected the level of obstruction in 28. This accuracy varied with the cause of obstruction. A direct indication of diagnosis was possible in 45 of the 67 patients. In a unit specializing in the management of complicated hepatobiliary problems, GSU has been shown to be accurate in differentiating extra- from intrahepatic jaundice. Being non-invasive, it appears ideally suited for use as a screening procedure, permitting selection of appropriate invasive investigations to provide complete preoperative imaging of the biliary tree. In patients with jaundice due to gallstones, GSU may be the only imaging technique required before surgery provided good operative cholangiography is available.
...
PMID:The role of grey scale ultrasonography in the investigation of jaundice. 42 80
In 48 patients with
obstructive jaundice
caused by unresectable lesions, a polyethylene tube was inserted into the biliary tract using a percutaneous transhepatic technique. This endoprosthesis provided permanent internal drainage without an external catheter. In 27 patients, bilirubin declined to anicteric or subicteric levels and pruritus subsided. In six patients, endoprosthesis had an intermediate effect, with moderate falls in bilirubin and improvement of their general condition. This method does not seem to increase the risk of percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography, which precedes insertion. It is recommended for patients with inoperable
bile duct obstruction
and may replace surgical biliodigestive anastomoses in patients with unresectable lesions.
...
PMID:Endoprosthesis for internal drainage of the biliary tract. Technique and results in 48 cases. 44 10
Cholestasis
means reduced flow of bile between hepatocytes and duodenum. Functional as well as mechanical factors may be important in the pathogenesis of cholestatic syndromes. Extra- and intrahepatic
cholestasis
can be distinguished. Intrahepatic bile ducts use to be dilated in extrahepatic
cholestasis
after early infancy; they are however not dilated in
obstructive jaundice
of the newborn. Neonatal cholestatic syndromes caused by liver cell diseases may in addition cause an obstruction of extrahepatic bile ducts. At the present time most workers in the field do believe that extrahepatic
cholestasis
in the newborn is rather due to inflammation than to congenital malformation.
...
PMID:[Pathogenesis of the neonatal cholestasis syndrome (author's transl)]. 44 70
Fifty-five patients with suspected
obstructive jaundice
were studied with both ERCP and abdominal ultrasound. Biliary tract obstruction was documented in 49 patients and parenchymal liver disease in 7. A definite cause of jaundice was demonstrated by ERCP in 45 of 49 patients with biliary tract obstruction but in only 28 of 49 patients by ultrasound. Bile duct dilatation, where present, was detected by ERCP in only 33 of 42 patients. ERCP was particularly effective in patients with common duct stones; common duct calculi and a dilated common duct were detected in 15 of 16 such patients. Dilated bile ducts where present were detected by ultrasound in 22 of 42 patients. Ultrasound was particularly helpful in patients with pancreatic cancer in whom a dilated common duct could not be opacified during ERCP. ERCP and abdominal ultrasound together provide a rapid and safe method of diagnosis in the jaundiced patient with suspected
bile duct obstruction
.
...
PMID:Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography and gray-scale abdominal ultrasound in the diagnosis of jaundice. 45 55
In the course of 4 years, among 11,738 admissions there were 245 (2.08%) patients with
cholestasis
(106 women and 139 men). Intrahepatic cholestasis (i.c.) was detected in 46.5%, and extrahepatic (e.c.) in 53.5%. The most frequent cause of i.c. were alcoholic and nonalcoholic chr. liver disease (fatty liver, chr. hepatitis, cirrhosis) (37% and 30%), acute viral hepatitis (15%) and toxic liver injury (14%) respectively. The causes of e.c. were: choledocholithiasis (44%), cancer of the pancreatic head (15%), cancer of gallbladder and extrahepatic ducts (12%) and cancer of liver (10%). The causes of c. were benigne, in 78.2%, while malignant neoplasms were present in 21.8%. Out of the multitude of laboratory tests two appeared particularly significant: glut, transpeptidase was pathologic in 81% of alcoholic liver disease, in 62% of the cases with
obstructive jaundice
and in 27.7% of malignant neoplasms. LX-lipoprotein examined in 52 patients was positive in 24% of i.c., and 60% of e.c. Proliferation of bile ducts was the most frequent finding in surgical liver biopsies in choledocholithiasis cases.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis, laboratory tests and histology in 245 patients with cholestasis. 52 15
In order to establish whether a complete
obstructive jaundice
can abolish the accumulation of diethyl-HIDA (EHIDA) in the liver parenchyma, the common bile duct was ligated in 14 mongrel dogs. Before as well as at regular intervals after ligature of the common bile duct, a sequence scintigraphy was performed with 2 mCi 99mTc-EHIDA. For evaluation, time-activity curves (Tmax, T1/2), and analogue scintigrams as well as laboratory parameters were used for assessment. Up to seven weeks after ligation of the common bile duct, there was a marked accumulation of EHIDA in the liver parenchyma. The relative liver uptake (liver/background ratio) fell from 8.9 to 2.7, whereas conversely the
cholestasis
indicators aP and bilirubine rose markedly. Tmax did not show any significant alterations, whereas T1/2 was prolonged from about one week after ligation. Because of the duct ligation, there was no excretion of activity into the intestines. Immediately after ligation of the common bile duct, the gallbladder was shown up as a "hot" area in which the majority of the applied activity appeared from about one hour p.i. Begining with the fifth to the seventh day after ligation, the gallbladder was seen as a "cold" area in the liver paraenchyma. Bilirubine and aP were raised by about 50 times the initial value. With longer lasting
cholestasis
, the scintigram no longer altered whereas bilirubine and aP rose further. Histological examination after ligation for more than five weeks showed slight alterations as a whole. Gamma-GT and in particular GPT were likewise slightly raised compared to bilirubine and aP. The conclusion was drawn from this that the good accumulation of EHIDA in the liver parenchyma which is to be observed without exception even in
cholestasis
lasting for several weeks could be explained by a relatively slight hepatocellular damage. Only when there is a consecutive parenchymal damage in extrahepatic jaundice, accumulation of EHIDA in the liver can be abolished.
...
PMID:[Animal experiments with 99mTc-diethyl-HIDA in acute complete bile duct occlusion (author's transl)]. 53 Aug 50
Twenty-four patients with clinical evidence of
obstructive jaundice
were examined by percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (PTC) and needle biopsy (NB) of liver. The presence of extrahepatic
bile duct obstruction
was confirmed by surgery in 21 cases. PTC and the combination of both methods were superior to NB alone in the differential diagnosis between extra- and intrahepatic biliary obstruction. Sampling bias added to the difficulties of NB in distinguishing beween these two types of obstruction. The combination of both precedures proved most useful in three cases with intrahepatic obstruction, in which the patients were spared unnecessary surgery. In five cases the NB provided additional information about the nature of the tumor metastases and gave suport to the clinicians in their therapeutic approach.
...
PMID:Percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography and needle biopsy in the differential diagnosis of obstruction of bile flow. 61 15
D-penicillamine is not generally considered to cause hepatic damage.
Cholestatic jaundice
developed in a patient with rheumatoid arthritis 4 weeks after penicillamine was added to his regimen, and he died in acute renal failure. The probability that penicillamine caused the
cholestasis
is discussed.
...
PMID:Cholestatic jaundice caused by D-penicillamine. 62 12
The prevalence of intrahepatic
cholestasis
of pregnancy was studied immediately postpartum in 869 women from three distant Chilean cities differing in climate and food supply.
Cholestatic jaundice
of pregnancy was detected in 2.4% and pruritus gravidarum in 13.2%, without significant differences between the three cities. Every woman was then ethnically classified as predominantly Caucasoid, Araucanian Indian, or Aimara Indian. A significantly higher prevalence of cholestatic jaundice of pregnancy (5.5%) and pruritus gravidarum (22.1%) was found in Araucanians than in Caucasoids (2.5% and 12.6% respectively) or in the Aimaras (0 and 11.8% respectively). The prevalence of intrahepatic
cholestasis
of pregnancy in Araucanians increased directly with the degree of "ethnic purity." Recurrence of the disease in multiparous women was also greater in Araucanians (13.8%) than in Caucasoids (5.5%) or in the Aimaras (3.9%). We propose that an ethnic predisposition to develop intrahepatic
cholestasis
of pregnancy is present in Araucanian women and that the high prevalence of the disease in Chile is mainly influenced by ethnic admixture with this South American Indian (ethnic) group.
...
PMID:Prevalence of intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy in Chile. 63 28
The authors describe their experience in 23 cases of biliary tract drainage by the transhepatic-percutaneous approach in the course of
obstructive jaundice
of diversified origin. This can be done for essentially three reasons, namely to alleviate jaundice preoperatively, to provide permanent bile drainage in patients not amenable to surgery, and to relieve excess pressure in surgical anastomoses of the biliary passages. On the basis of biological considerations (relationship between severity and duration of
cholestasis
on the one hand and postoperative mortality and morbidity on the other), and in light of their own results, the authors argue in favor of this procedure, explaining that it is only mildly traumatic to the patient, easy to perform, attended by a low quota of complications, and above all effective as a drainage; also, it does not unduly prolong the preoperative period for patients scheduled for further and major surgery. Also in view of the current role of PTC in the diagnosis of
obstructive jaundice
, they submit that transhepatic-percutaneous drainage should be done right next to recognition of dilatation of the intrahepatic bile passages by CAT or echotomography.
...
PMID:[Percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage]. 69 20
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