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Query: UMLS:C0015695 (
fatty liver
)
13,941
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Most of the time
Wilson's disease
becomes clinically evident in childhood by atypical abdominal symptoms. Therefore early diagnosis is very difficult. In four out of eight patients with
Wilson's disease
, diagnosed relatively early in the Children's Hospital of Heidelberg University, we could demonstrate that each case of liver disease, which cannot be classified, may be suspicious of
Wilson's disease
. Even normal levels of ceruloplasmin in serum and copper in urine are not inconsistent with
Wilson's disease
. There is no screening method in infancy.
Fatty liver
in school children is very suspicious of
Wilson's disease
.
...
PMID:[Early diagnosis of Wilson's disease in childhood (author's transl)]. 66 32
Three distinct patterns of structural abnormalities of mitochondria, indicated as types I, II and III and associated with steatosis, were identified in the hepatocytes of 40 of 42 asymptomatic and 8 of 22 symptomatic patients with documented
Wilson's disease
before treatment. No correlation was seen between the type of mitochondrial abnormality and the patient's age, hepatic copper concentration, degree of
hepatic steatosis
or serum aminotransferase level. However, comparison of the types of abnormal hepatocellular mitochondria displayed by five pairs and one trio of asymptomatic siblings revealed remarkably similar types of abnormalities in each family. The variety of mitochondrial types encountered in different families and the high degree of type identity in sibling relationships indicate that the structural changes are genetically determined.
...
PMID:Fraternal concordance of types of abnormal hepatocellular mitochondria in Wilson's disease. 150 17
The copper profile in
Wilson's disease
resembles that of human and guinea pig neonates. Microvesicular steatosis is characteristic of early histological damage in
Wilson's disease
. The aim of this study was to relate the histological, histochemical and ultrastructural changes seen in developing guinea pig liver to the developmental pattern of liver copper in these animals. Copper-stressed and control guinea pigs were studied. Liver biopsies were stained with haematoxylin and eosin, rhodanine (for copper), orcein (for copper-associated protein) and oil Red 0 (for fat). Selected specimens were examined by electron microscopy. Liver and serum copper levels and copper oxidase activity were also determined. Fetal liver copper increased during the last trimester of pregnancy, reaching five times the adult level in the perinatal period and falling rapidly in the 4 days after birth. Marked steatosis developed in both control and copper-stressed guinea pig liver. The fat score correlated strongly with liver copper concentration (r: 0.60; p less than 0.001). Orcein and rhodanine staining correlated with liver copper concentration (r: 0.52 and r: 0.40 respectively, p less than 0.01). Marked prenatal
hepatic steatosis
and its postnatal clearance correlates with changes in liver copper concentration. This experimental model provides an opportunity to study the pathogenesis of
hepatic steatosis
and the relationship between copper retention and steatosis.
...
PMID:Copper overload in the developing guinea pig liver: a histological, histochemical and biochemical study. 277 Apr 33
We conducted a pilot study to assess the feasibility and efficacy of postdilution hemofiltration (PDHF) in the management of acute hepatic failure. From January 1984 through May 1986, we encountered seven patients with acute hepatic failure and entered these consecutive patients in the study; three had non-A, non-B hepatitis and one each had type B hepatitis, fulminant
Wilson's disease
(
hepatolenticular degeneration
), acute allograft (liver) failure, and acute
fatty liver
of pregnancy. Two of these seven patients were unable to undergo PDHF because of a precarious hemodynamic status. Of the five patients treated with PDHF, four had amelioration of hepatic encephalopathy; in two of these patients, a close temporal relationship was noted between the improvement and the procedure. Four patients had appreciable thrombocytopenia related to PDHF and bleeding complications. Our preliminary results support a possible role for PDHF as a temporary artificial liver support system for patients with acute hepatic failure.
...
PMID:Postdilution hemofiltration in the management of acute hepatic failure: a pilot study. 327 72
One-hundred-and-ten children between the ages of two months and 14 years with the following liver diseases were studied: 16 with acute viral hepatitis, 8 with persistent chronic hepatitis, 31 with active chronic hepatitis, 5 with
hepatic steatosis
, 11 with cirrhosis of the liver, 24 with newborn cholestasis, 3 with
Wilson's disease
, 2 with congenital hepatic fibrosis, 5 with metabolic diseases and 5 due to other causes. These children presented Pi system phenotypes in isoelectric focus using ultrafine polyacrylamide gels according to Kuepper's method, with modifications incorporated to determine Alpha-1-antitrypsin (A1-AT) serum level deficiencies in those presenting the Pi ZZ phenotype, a liver biopsy with P.A.S. coloration on digestion of diastase and a family history of the phenotype. Four (3.6%) of the children with Pi ZZ phenotypes showed a decrease of serum A1-AT and the presence of positive P.A.S. inclusions resistant to diastase in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes. Three had a history of postnatal icterus and the fourth presented hepatomegaly. The phenotypic study of the parents showed their being heterozygous (MZ), while siblings were normal (MM). The importance of the diagnosis of A1-AT deficiency and the diagnostic value of detecting Pi system phenotypes in every case of liver disease in children and adolescents is stressed.
...
PMID:[The value of the Pi system phenotype in alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency]. 349 88
Three patterns of hepatocyte injury in man, direct, immunological, and cholestatic, are described. The characteristics of the direct pattern are predominantly mitochondrial damage, central (zone 3) necrosis, and, usually, fatty change. It can be subdivided into the alcohol type (also seen with obesity, in diabetes, as a reaction to perhexiline, in
Wilson's disease
, and in Indian childhood cirrhosis) and the Reye's syndrome type (also seen with tetracycline toxicity,
fatty liver
of pregnancy, and cytotoxic drugs). Reactive drug metabolites, metal poisoning, and anoxia are also associated with the direct pattern of hepatocyte injury. The immunological pattern is characterised by damage to cell membranes with piecemeal necrosis of periportal (zone 1) hepatocytes and mononuclear-cell infiltration. Examples include chronic active hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, and drug reactions such as those to halothane. In the cholestatic pattern there is disturbance of the bile-secretory mechanism with retention of bile within the hepatocytes. Cholestatic liver injury may be intrahepatic, as in sex-hormone cholestasis, or extrahepatic, as in choledocholithiasis or carcinoma of the bile ducts. Identification of the type of hepatocyte injury is valuable in diagnosis, in assessing prognosis, and in selecting treatment.
...
PMID:Patterns of hepatocyte injury in man. 612 Dec 33
A 41/2-year-old asymptomatic girl with persistent elevated serum transaminase levels for eight months was found to have
Wilson's disease
. The diagnosis was suspected by the presence of
fatty liver
and nonspecific chronic hepatitis on liver biopsy and was proved by studies of copper metabolism, including determinations of serum ceruloplasmin and hepatic copper concentrations. Unexplained persistent transaminase elevation in children demand investigation by needle liver biopsy. Th presence of
fatty liver
and hepatitis should raise the possibility of
Wilson's disease
, which may then be confirmed by more specific tests. Advantages to early diagnosis include the institution of specific therapy and prevention of progressive liver disease.
...
PMID:Persistent transaminasemia and fatty liver. Their use in the diagnosis of presymptomatic Wilson's disease. 706 50
We report the pattern of childhood liver disease revealed by a study of 134 biopsies obtained from 128 infants and children below the age of 16 years seen in this hospital during a 3-year period. The most common histological diagnoses were neonatal hepatitis syndrome in 23, storage disorders in 11, and cirrhosis in 26 children. Less common diagnoses included Reye's syndrome in four,
fatty liver
in seven, granulomas in four, and chronic active hepatitis, fulminant hepatitis, congenital hepatic fibrosis and neoplasms in two children each. Miscellaneous specific diagnoses were made in 16 cases. Twenty-three per cent of the liver biopsies were non-diagnostic. The study has provided background information on the occurrence of specific histological diagnoses in liver biopsies in infants and children in this tropical region and identifies a group with cirrhosis and copper deposition which was not typical of either Indian childhood cirrhosis or
Wilson's disease
.
...
PMID:The pattern of liver disease in Indian children: a review of 128 biopsied cases. 768 12
Liver disease occurring in pregnancy can be categorized into three groups. The first group includes diseases unique to pregnancy and caused by it. Among these are hyperemesis gravidarum, cholestasis of pregnancy, and disorders associated with preeclampsia. Liver involvement may be expected in 50% of patients with hyperemesis gravidarum. Preeclampsia has been associated with both the HELLP syndrome (hemolysis, elevated liver tests, and low platelets), which includes hepatic infarction and rupture, and with acute
fatty liver
of pregnancy (AFLP). In patients with HELLP syndrome, liver test abnormalities do not correlate with liver injury. Therefore, this and other disorders associated with preeclampsia require aggressive treatment, primarily with delivery. The second group of liver diseases are those exacerbated by pregnancy. Viral infections involving the liver that are usually benign, such as hepatitis E and herpes simplex, are more likely to be exacerbated in pregnant women and are more likely to lead to fulminant hepatic failure. Cholelithiasis and Budd-Chiari syndrome are more prevalent in pregnant women. The third group is comprised of liver diseases that are preexisting in the pregnant patient and includes autoimmune chronic active hepatitis and
Wilson's disease
. The number of patients in the last group is small, as chronic liver disease is rare in women who are able to bear children.
...
PMID:Hepatic disease in pregnancy. 810 83
In heavy drinkers with clinical evidence of liver disease, routine investigations should exclude the possibility of other chronic liver diseases of non-alcoholic aetiology requiring specific therapy--these include chronic viral hepatitis, autoimmune diseases of the liver,
Wilson's disease
and genetic haemochromatosis. If abnormalities in liver biochemistry persist despite abstinence, or if the diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease is in doubt, a liver biopsy should be carried out. Studies evaluating the role of liver biopsy in alcoholic liver disease suggest that without histological confirmation the diagnosis will be inaccurate in 10-20% of patients. Serum biochemistry and the currently available imaging modalities have severe limitations in determining the relative contributions of
fatty liver
, alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis to the overall picture in alcoholic liver disease. Histological examination is therefore of additional value in determining the prognosis, which is worst in patients with a combination of alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis. There are a number of indices available, based on clinical and laboratory information, for evaluating the short-term prognosis, but these can only be used with accuracy if the histological pattern of damage has initially been evaluated.
...
PMID:Investigation of alcoholic liver disease. 821 5
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