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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
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Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is a chronic cholestatic liver disease of unknown aetiology characterised by inflammation and fibrosis of the biliary tree. The mean age at diagnosis is 40 years and men are affected twice as often as women. There is a reported annual incidence of PSC of 0.9-1.31/100,000 and point prevalence of 8.5-13.6/100,000. The onset of PSC is usually insidious and many patients are asymptomatic at diagnosis or have mild symptoms only such as fatigue, abdominal discomfort and pruritus In late stages, splenomegaly and jaundice may be a feature. In most, the disease progresses to cirrhosis and liver failure. Cholangiocarcinoma develops in 8-30% of patients. PSC is thought to be immune mediated and is often associated with inflammatory bowel disease, especially ulcerative colitis. The disease is diagnosed on typical cholangiographic and histological findings and after exclusion of secondary sclerosing cholangitis. Median survival has been estimated to be 12 years from diagnosis in symptomatic patients. Patients who are asymptomatic at diagnosis, the majority of whom will develop progressive disease, have a survival rate greater than 70% at 16 years after diagnosis. Liver transplantation remains the only effective therapeutic option for patients with end-stage liver disease from PSC, although high dose ursodeoxycholic acid may have a beneficial effect.
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PMID:Primary sclerosing cholangitis. 1706 36

Chronic biliary tract disease is the third most common indication for orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in the United States. Most patients undergoing OLT for chronic biliary tract disease have end-stage liver disease associated with cirrhosis, but a minority are transplanted in the precirrhotic stage for indications that can include poor quality of life (eg, intractable pruritus or fatigue), recurrent ascending cholangitis, or cholangiocarcinoma. A smaller subset of these patients suffer from severe noncirrhotic portal hypertension that can be associated with histologic features of nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) and/or obliterative portal venopathy. We reviewed 306 liver explants performed for chronic biliary tract disease at 2 institutions during 1995 to 2003 to identify patients who were transplanted in the precirrhotic stage. The following clinical data were recorded: age, sex, type of biliary tract disease, radiology, clinical symptoms, signs of portal hypertension, pretransplant shunting procedures, time between diagnosis and OLT, and primary indication for OLT. Histopathologic data included: explant weight, gross appearance, fibrosis stage (1 to 4), cholangitis, bile duct dysplasia, malignancy, portal vein thrombi, presence of NRH, and presence of obliterative portal venopathy. Twenty-six of 306 (8.5%) patients underwent OLT in the precirrhotic stage (12 females: 14 males, mean age of 46 y, age range 12 to 68 y). At explant, fibrosis stage ranged from 1 to 2 (portal and periportal fibrosis) to 3 (multiple bridging fibrosis). Underlying biliary tract disease included primary sclerosing cholangitis (18 cases), primary biliary cirrhosis (5 cases), autoimmune cholangitis (2 cases), and secondary sclerosing cholangitis (1 case). Primary indications for OLT were recurrent cholangitis and/or decreased quality of life (11 cases), complications of portal hypertension (6 cases), portal hypertension plus cholangitis/decreased quality of life (5 cases), and malignancy (4 cases). Of the 11 patients with portal hypertension as a major indication for transplant, 2 had undergone transjugular intrahepatic portal-systemic shunting and 3 others had portal vein thrombi. Histopathologically, NRH was prominent in 8 of these 11 patients (73%) and obliterative portal venopathy in 6 (55%). NRH was also present in 4 of the 15 (27%) patients who were transplanted for other indications. These results indicate that precirrhotic portal hypertension is a predominant or major contributing factor to OLT in a significant minority (11 of 306, 3.3%) of patients with chronic biliary tract disease. The occurrence of NRH in some patients transplanted for other indications suggests it is a histologic pattern that can precede the development of clinically significant portal hypertension.
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PMID:Liver transplantation in precirrhotic biliary tract disease: Portal hypertension is frequently associated with nodular regenerative hyperplasia and obliterative portal venopathy. 1706 88

Shewanella species are an unusual cause of disease in humans. However, reports of Shewanella infections have been increasing, and hepatobiliary disease has been proposed as a predisposing factor following a critical course. We report the first Japanese septic case of decompensated liver disease in which this bacterium acted as a definite pathogen. A 67-year-old Japanese man with primary sclerosing cholangitis was admitted to our hospital complaining of fever, general fatigue, pain, and a rash on the lower left extremity. He was tentatively diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis caused by Vibrio vulnificus because of his decompensated cirrhotic liver and history of consuming raw fish. Thereafter, the diagnosis was altered to cellulitis and Shewanella septicemia on the basis of the characteristics of his skin lesion and an arterial blood culture. He died of multiple organ failure on the eleventh day in the hospital. Since several reports have demonstrated that Shewanella can cause lethal sepsis in patients with hepatobiliary disease, we should be aware of the pathogenicity of this bacterium.
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PMID:Shewanella infection in decompensated liver disease: a septic case. 1732 99

Autoimmune liver disease (ALD) includes a spectrum of diseases which comprises both cholestatic and hepatitic forms: autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) and the so called "overlap" syndromes where hepatitic and cholestatic damage coexists. All these diseases are characterized by an extremely high heterogeneity of presentation, varying from asymptomatic, acute (as in a subset of AIH) or chronic (with aspecific symptoms such as fatigue and myalgia in AIH or fatigue and pruritus in PBC and PSC). The detection and characterization of non organ specific autoantibodies plays a major role in the diagnostic approach of autoimmune liver disease; anti nuclear reactivities (ANA) and anti smooth muscle antibodies (SMA) mark type 1 AIH, liver kidney microsomal antibody type 1 (LKM1) and liver cytosol type 1 (LC1) are the serological markers of type 2 AIH; antimitochondrial antibodies (AMA) are associated with PBC, while no specific marker is found in PSC, since anticytoplasmic neutrophil antibodies with perinuclear pattern (atypical p-ANCA or p-ANNA) are also detected in a substantial proportion of type 1 AIH cases. Treatment options rely on immunosoppressive therapy (steroids and azathioprine) in AIH and on ursodeoxycholic acid in cholestatic conditions; in all these diseases liver transplantation remains the only therapeutical approach for the end stage of liver disease.
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PMID:Autoimmune liver disease 2007. 1806 56

A 15-year-old girl was admitted in April 2004 owing to fatigue and loss of appetite. Her paediatrician had found elevated serum levels for alkaline phosphatase. The endoscopic retrograde cholangiography documented typical signs of primary sclerosing cholangitis with involvement of the small and large ducts. The liver biopsy revealed extensive septal and portal fibrosis. No evidence of inflammatory bowel disease was present. She was started on ursodeoxycholic acid therapy and improved clinically. After 22 months she presented again with rising transaminase levels up to 600 U/l. The second liver biopsy was strongly suggestive for autoimmune hepatitis besides the already known features of primary sclerosing cholangitis. Elevated levels of IgG, and elevated titres for ANA and antismooth muscle antibodies (ASMA) were also found. The duct irregularities seen on re-endoscopic retrograde cholangiography were slightly regredient as compared with the first investigation. We added prednisolone and azathioprine to the ursodeoxycholic acid and the transaminase levels dropped together with clinical improvement.
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PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis 2 years after the diagnosis of primary sclerosing cholangitis: an unusual overlap syndrome in a 17-year-old adolescent. 1830 6

Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is a chronic cholestatic liver disease characterized by inflammation and fibrosis of the bile ducts, resulting in end-stage liver disease and reduced life expectancy. PSC primarily affects young and middle-aged men, often in association with underlying inflammatory bowel disease. The etiology of PSC includes immune-mediated components and elements of undefined nature. A cholestatic picture of liver biochemistries with elevations in serum alkaline phosphatase, nonspecific autoantibodies such as perinuclear antineutrophilic antibody, antinuclear antibodies and smooth muscle antibodies, and diffuse multifocal biliary strictures, resulting in a 'beaded' appearance on radiographic studies, are the hallmarks of the disease. No effective medical therapy is currently available, although clinical studies are in progress. Ursodeoxycholic acid at high doses (28 mg/kg/day to 30 mg/kg/day) is the most promising agent but is unproven so far. Liver transplantation is currently the only life-extending therapy for patients with end-stage disease, although recurrent disease can be observed in the transplanted liver. The multiple complications of PSC include pruritus, fatigue, vitamin deficiencies, metabolic bone disease, peristomal varices, bacterial cholangitis, dominant biliary strictures, gallbladder stones and polyps, and malignancy, particularly cholangiocarcinoma, which is the most lethal complication of PSC.
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PMID:Primary sclerosing cholangitis. 1870 47

Cardiovascular system dysregulation in the form of autonomic dysfunction is common at all stages of the disease process in the autoimmune liver disease primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and associates with the symptom of fatigue. The mechanisms underpinning autonomic dysfunction in PBC are, however, at present unclear. In this study we set out to explore, for the first time, cardiac structure and function in PBC using impedance cardiography (ICG) and magnetic resonance methodologies. ICG was assessed beat to beat in response to orthostasis (by head-up tilt) in age and sex case-matched high-fatigue and low-fatigue PBC groups (assessed by Fatigue Impact Scale), normal control subjects (n = 15 each group) and a liver disease control cohort (primary sclerosing cholangitis). Cardiac structure and bioenergetics were examined in 15 of the PBC subjects and 8 of the normal control subjects by magnetic resonance spectroscopy and cine imaging. Capacity of the left ventricle to respond to orthostasis [left ventricular ejection time (LVET)] was impaired in PBC compared with matched normal control subjects (P = 0.05). This was a PBC-specific phenomenon unrelated to fatigue status. PBC patients exhibited significantly lower cardiac muscle phosphocreatine-to-ATP ratio (PCr/ATP ratio; measure of cardiac bioenergetic integrity) compared with control subjects (P < 0.01). PCr/ATP <1.6 (indicative of increased risk of death in cardiomyopathy) was present in 6/15 (40%) PBC patients (0/8 control subjects; P < 0.05). Cardiac structure and function were similar in all measures of left ventricular morphology between control subjects and PBC. The close relationship between PCr/ATP and LVET seen in normal subjects (r(2) = 0.6; P < 0.05) was lost in PBC patients, a finding compatible with myocardial dysfunction. Significant correlation was seen between fatigue severity in PBC and fall in cardiac output on orthostasis (r(2) = 0.25; P = 0.005). Our findings suggest the presence of altered myocardial function in PBC. Autonomic "dysfunction" may, rather than being an abnormal process, represent a compensatory mechanism to increase cardiac return to mitigate these effects.
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PMID:Impaired cardiovascular function in primary biliary cirrhosis. 2013 49

Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) are the two most common causes of chronic cholestatic liver disease in adults. In PBC, therapy with ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) is safe and has been associated with tangible biochemical, histologic, and survival benefits. However, a need for different or adjuvant therapies remains for specific subsets of PBC patients, including those who do not respond to UDCA and those who have advanced histologic disease at presentation. Similarly, beneficial therapies for disease-related symptoms that do not typically respond to UDCA (eg, fatigue and pruritus) are still needed. In contrast to PBC, no medical therapy of proven benefit has been identified for patients with PSC. In PBC and PSC, adequate management of complications of chronic cholestasis is important. For both diseases, liver transplantation is the only curative option.
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PMID:Latest and emerging therapies for primary biliary cirrhosis and primary sclerosing cholangitis. 2042 80

This article focuses on the new insights and developments in biliary tract disorders. In patients with large bile duct stones, balloon dilation after the after endoscopic sphincterotomy appears to be an effective alternative to mechanical lithotripsy. A 2-month biliary stenting reduces stone size and number of stones. Early laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients with cholezysto- and choledocholithiasis appears to be safe and might prevent biliary complications in the period following sphincterotomy. A bile sample collected during cholangiography for microbiological analysis is a simple, potentially valuable, diagnostic tool in patients with cholangitis. Each center should recognize its own patterns of infection to ensure ideal targeted therapy. In patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), development of fatigue is an independent risk factor of increased mortality. The risk of osteoporosis is increased in women with PBC and their risk of fracture increased significantly already at a T-score lower than -1.5. For PBC-patients not responding on UDCA-therapy, fenofibrate may be a new therapeutic approach. The incidence of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) increases significantly in Scandinavia. In PSC patients with dominant stenosis the additional presence of inflammatory bowel disease is associated with an increased risk of cancer and a decreased survival. The risk of osteoporosis in PSC patients is significantly increased, especially in those with long-standing inflammatory bowel disease. In patients with advanced cholangiocarcinoma, bilateral stenting of the bile ducts is associated with better prognosis. The combination therapy with gemcitabine and cisplatin is an appropriate option for the treatment of patients with advanced biliary cancer.
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PMID:[Biliary diseases - new insights and developments]. 2144 34

Several hepatobiliary abnormalities have been described in association with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), small duct PSC, chronic hepatitis, cryptogenic cirrhosis, cholangiocarcinoma, and cholelithiasis. PSC is the most common biliary condition in patients with IBD, with an incidence ranging from 2.5% to 7.5%. PSC usually progresses insidiously and eventually leads to cirrhosis independent of inflammatory bowel disease activity. There is a very high incidence of cholangiocarcinoma and an elevated risk for developing colon cancer in patients with PSC. Medical therapy has not proven successful in slowing disease progression or prolonging survival. Treatment of symptoms due to cholestasis, such as pruritis and steatorrhea, is an important aspect of the medical care of patients with PSC. Our preferred treatment of pruritis due to cholestasis is with bile acid binding exchange resins, such as cholestyramine or colestipol. Endoscopic manipulation is recommended for treating complications of recurrent cholangitis or worsening jaundice in the setting of a dominant stricture, but endoscopic approaches have not been conclusively demonstrated to improve survival or decrease the need for liver transplantation. Liver transplantation remains the only effective treatment of advanced PSC, and should be considered in patients with complications of cirrhosis or intractable pruritis or fatigue.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary complications of inflammatory bowel disease. 2177 6


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