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Query: UMLS:C0015695 (
fatty liver
)
13,941
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 22-year-old woman developed sudden hepatic encephalopathy and severe intestinal bleeding. She was diagnosed with acute
fatty liver
and hypersensitivity vasculitis and was successfully treated with whole plasma exchange, methylprednisolone pulse therapy, and transcatheter
arterial embolization
. Twenty-seven months later, she began complaining of lower abdominal fullness, tenderness, and nausea and vomiting. Histologic examination showed that she had developed gastrointestinal and renal amyloidosis with intestinal pseudoobstruction and proteinuria. The immunohistochemical study of the stomach, rectum, and kidney with anti-amyloid A fluorescent antibody showed that the systemic amyloid deposit was secondary to her underlying disease. This is the first report of amyloidosis occurring secondary to hypersensitivity vasculitis.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal amyloidosis secondary to hypersensitivity vasculitis presenting with intestinal pseudoobstruction. 972 75
Massive obstetric haemorrhage is a major cause of maternal death and morbidity; abruptio placentae, placenta praevia and postpartum haemorrhage being the main causes. A delay in the correction of hypovolaemia, a delay in the diagnosis and treatment of defective coagulation and a delay in the surgical control of bleeding are the avoidable factors in most maternal deaths caused by haemorrhage. The degree of hypotension is the first guide to the level of blood loss, except in abruptio placentae. A protocol incorporating the guidelines is shown. The rapid correction of hypovolaemia with crystalloids and red cells is the first priority, followed by blood component therapy as indicated by the haematocrit, coagulation tests, platelet count and clinical features. Serial monitoring of the response to treatment is essential. Oxytocin and prostaglandin will correct uterine atony, and appropriate surgical intervention is required for traumatic bleeding. Ligation of the uterine arteries, ovarian arteries and internal iliac arteries will usually control uterine bleeding,
arterial embolization
also being effective. Hysterectomy should be considered as well. Catastrophic bleeding may also arise in complications such as rupture of the liver and acute
fatty liver
of pregnancy. These rare complications are best managed by a multidisciplinary team involving the obstetrician, anaesthetist, haematologist, hepatologist and renal physician. The rupture of aneurysms in the splenic artery and in other branches of the aorta can result in massive haemorrhage during pregnancy and following delivery.
...
PMID:Massive obstetric haemorrhage. 1078 57
A 70-year-old man had been obese since youth. He had been treated for hypertension and diabetes mellitus. An abdominal ultrasound showed a mass in the liver. He was admitted to St Marianna University School of Medicine Hospital for further evaluation. There was no history of alcohol use, and hepatitis viral markers and autoantibodies were all negative. Several imaging studies showed overt hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Transcatheter
arterial embolization
was performed, followed by surgical resection. Histopathological examination revealed moderately differentiated HCC. The non-tumor areas had pseudolobules in a diffuse pattern similar to alcoholic cirrhosis. The histological findings in the ectopic liver tissue attached to the gallbladder, which was also resected during surgery, were that there was no cirrhosis, but fine fibrosis with inflammatory cell infiltration of sinusoids. These findings were consistent with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). There was probably a progression of similar findings that had developed into cirrhosis. These findings confirmed a diagnosis of HCC, cirrhosis, and underlying NASH in this patient. The present case is important for investigation of the development into cirrhosis and carcinogenesis of NASH. The present case demonstrates the importance of evaluating obese patients with
fatty liver
for underlying NASH and ongoing follow up for development of cirrhosis and HCC.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma with silent and cirrhotic non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, accompanying ectopic liver tissue attached to gallbladder. 1639 79