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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During the last ten years, several clinical manifestations of Yersinia enterocolitica infection have been reported. Surgeons are especially aware of "the right iliac fossa syndrome", caused by mesenterial lymphadenitis and terminal ileitis. We suggest that Yersinia enterocolitica may also cause a clinical condition easily misinterpreted as cholecystitis, and accompanied by slightly elevated serum levels of ASAT, LD, AP and bilirubin. Apparently, this condition may run a chronic relapsing course. A report is given of two cases of liver affection associated wtih positive Y. ent. antibody titre. Case 1 would illustrate the chronic relapsing liver affection with stationary titre. In Case 2 an acute Au-negative hepatitis is accompanied by significant rise and fall in titre.
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PMID:Liver affection associated with Yersinia enterocolitica infection. 61 Feb 87

The viral hepatitis is a serious public health problem worldwide. Some problem is hepatitis B, particularly superinfection HBV-HDV and least hepatitis C (HCV), because they are transmitted via parenteral routes. About 20% of patients becomes a chronic carrier. Some chronic carriers are healthy: and they have no functional deficiencies. Others however, chronic active hepatitis develops and can lead to cirrhosis of the liver and finally to hepatocellular carcinoma, that is one of the major cancers of the world today. The immunocomplexes play a role in pathogenesis of several syndromes, such as: polyarthritis nodosa, glomerulonephritis, acrodermatitis. In the study based on questionnaires mailed 645 persons after acute viral hepatitis they were observed: cholecystitis--13.9%, stomach and/or duodenum ulcer--11.5%, and cholelithiasis--8.1%. An important results of the investigation is the conclusion that hepatitis caused distinct decrease of the health condition and change of the lifestyle. After the viral hepatitis 9% of patients shifted to a lighter job for a time, 3.8% for good and 5.6% patients after hepatitis B were receiving disability payment. In the light of the problems discussed here the vaccination would prevent not only the acute liver illness but also the sequelae of the disease.
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PMID:[Viral hepatitis sequelae]. 133 49

The results of the study have shown that the nutrition of rural population is characterized by excessive consumption of bread and baked products, by high content of phosphorus, magnesium and iron, low content of animal proteins, vegetable oils, calcium, vitamins A, ascorbic acid and riboflavin. The incidence of cardiovascular, respiratory and alimentary diseases in this group of population was rather high. The nutrition of students is characterized by excessive consumption of polysaccharides, vegetable oils, thiamine, niacin, ascorbic acid (in winter-spring period), and calcium. Diseases associated with nutrition disorders (obesity, hepatitis, cholecystitis, colitis) are most often recorded in this group of population.
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PMID:[Actual nutrition and health of several groups of rural and urban population of the Republic of Georgia]. 138 91

Resulted are analysed of complex treatment of 103 patients with duodenal ulcer. Infusions and concoctions of medicinal plants were used. The regimen of administration and composition of the cocktail from herbs depended on the character of gastric secretion and dyskinesia of the gastroduodenal zone as well as on the presence of concomitant diseases; cholecystitis, gastritis, hepatitis, pancreatitis, enterocolitis. Intragastric drip administration of the concoctions and infusions of medicinal plants favour scarring of duodenal ulcers and reduction of the number and duration of recurrences.
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PMID:[The differentiated phytotherapy of patients with duodenal peptic ulcer]. 144 19

The paper is concerned with a clinical description of yersiniosis in 12 women who suffered from manifest or uneventful cholelithiasis. The disease started by an attack of biliary colic. The clinical symptomatology was noticed to run in stages during which the signs of calculous cholecystitis vanished while the symptoms of hepatitis persisted. In the acute period, the conservative treatment of the patients was carried out by the infectionist jointly with the surgeon, followed by dispensary observation lasting 1 to 3 months until complete and stable normalization of aminotranferase activity. The outcomes were favourable.
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PMID:[The characteristics of the course of Yersinia hepatitis in cholelithiasis patients]. 181 59

Ultrasound examinations of 563 patients with right upper quadrant pain and a clinical suspicion of acute cholecystitis were reviewed. In 31 patients, a tender, dilated gall-bladder with a thick (more than 4 mm) partly hypoechoic wall without any detectable calculi was found on the emergency examination. This was interpreted as due to acute acalculous cholecystitis. None of the patients was critically ill. Twenty-one of the patients had follow-up studies with either oral cholecystography, cholangiography, or ultrasound. Fourteen of the 21 had gall-bladder calculi while seven did not. These seven patients presumably represent the true frequency (1.2%) of acute acalculous cholecystitis in this clinical setting. In five other patients with an initial diagnosis of acute acalculous cholecystitis the gall-bladder wall thickening probably was secondary to concomitant pancreatitis, appendicitis, hepatitis or peptic ulcer disease. A meticulous and careful search for gall-bladder calculi should be performed in the presence of a dilated, tender thick-walled gall-bladder.
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PMID:The clinical importance of a thick-walled, tender gall-bladder without stones on ultrasonography. 187 51

Gastrointestinal complications after heart and heart-lung transplantation are being recognized and reported more frequently in the literature as a cause of significant morbidity. Between July 1983 and December 1989, 131 consecutive patients underwent 133 heart or heart-lung transplant procedures at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Immunosuppression consisted of either cyclosporine and prednisone or cyclosporine, prednisone, and azathioprine. Twenty-eight patients (21%) had 38 gastrointestinal complications, including visceral perforations (n = 6), gastrocutaneous fistula (n = 1), retroperitoneal abscess (n = 1), cholecystitis (n = 5), gastric atony (n = 1), perianal abscess (n = 1), gastrointestinal bleeding (n = 4), esophagitis (n = 2), pancreatitis (n = 2), pancreatic abscess (n = 2), hepatitis (n = 2), cytomegalovirus infection (n = 3), and diarrhea (n = 8). Among this group of 28 patients, 17 operative procedures were needed by 13 patients (46%), for an incidence of major abdominal procedures in the entire transplant cohort of 10% (13/131). Operations included cholecystectomy (n = 5), colon resection with colostomy (n = 3), closure of perforated gastroduodenal ulcer (n = 3) and repair of gastrocutaneous fistula (n = 1), drainage of pancreatic abscess (n = 2), pyloroplasty (n = 1) and incision and drainage of perianal abscess (n = 1). The operative mortality rate was 8% (1/13). Overall survival in patients with gastrointestinal complications was no different than that in the entire transplant population. Age, gender, race, and number of rejection episodes did not correlate with the presence of gastrointestinal complications. Patients with gastrointestinal pathologic conditions necessitating surgery often had atypical presentations, with subtle clinical findings but with common general surgical problems.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Gastrointestinal complications in heart and in heart-lung transplant patients. 191 97

The authors report the case of a patient with acute alithiasic cholecystitis associated with viral B hepatitis revealing periarteritis nodosa. Histopathological results showed signs of focal arteritis in the gallbladder and liver. Because of the negativity of the viral DNA in serum and the lack of histopathological necrosis in hepatic specimen, the patient was treated by steroid therapy only with a rapid regression of signs of vasculitis and the disappearance of the hepatitis markers.
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PMID:[Alithiasic cholecystitis and viral hepatitis B disclosing periarteritis nodosa]. 197 25

Patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) frequently develop hepatic dysfunction. Although hepatic injury may indirectly result from malnutrition, hypotension, administered medications, sepsis, or other conditions, the hepatic injury is frequently due to opportunistic hepatic infection, directly related to AIDS. Infection with Mycobacterium avium intracellulare typically occurs in patients with advanced immunocompromise and with systemic symptoms due to widely disseminated infection. In contrast, hepatic tuberculosis often occurs with less advanced immunocompromise. Cytomegaloviral infection may produce a hepatitis. Cytomegaloviral and cryptosporidial infections have been implicated as causes of acalculous cholecystitis and of a secondary sclerosing cholangitis. About 10-20% of patients with AIDS have chronic hepatitis B infection. These patients tend to develop minimal hepatic inflammation and necrosis. The clinical findings in patients with hepatic cryptococcal infection are usually due to concomitant extrahepatic infection. Hepatic histoplasmosis usually develops as part of a widely disseminated infection with systemic symptoms. Hepatic involvement by Kaposi's sarcoma is rarely documented ante mortem because an unguided liver biopsy is an insensitive diagnostic procedure. Patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the liver typically have lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, and systemic symptoms. As a pragmatic approach, patients with liver dysfunction and HIV-related disease should have a sonographic or computerized tomographic examination of the liver. Patients with dilated bile ducts should undergo endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography because opportunistic infection may produce biliary obstruction. Patients with a focal hepatic lesion should be considered for a guided liver biopsy. Patients with a significantly elevated serum alkaline phosphatase level should be considered for a percutaneous liver biopsy. When performed for these indications, liver biopsy will demonstrate a significant disease involving the liver in about 50% of patients with AIDS and in about 25% of patients who are HIV seropositive but who are not known to have AIDS. The clinical impact of a diagnostic biopsy is blunted by a lack of efficacious therapy for many opportunistic infections.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary manifestations of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 198 33

Sonographic identification of thickening of the gallbladder wall that consists of multiple striations (alternate hypoechoic and hyperechoic layers) has been considered strong evidence of the presence of acute cholecystitis. We studied 27 patients in whom sonograms showed striated thickening of the gallbladder wall to determine the diagnostic significance of this finding. Striations were classified as focal or diffuse. Sonograms were correlated with pathologic findings in 16 patients and with clinical diagnoses and laboratory findings in 11. Patients were categorized as having cholecystitis with or without gangrene or edema of the gallbladder wall unrelated to gallbladder disease. Striated thickening of the gallbladder wall was due to cholecystitis in 10 patients, and all 10 had gangrenous changes at surgery or at pathologic examination. Striations were focal in eight of these patients and diffuse in two. Striated thickening of the gallbladder wall was due to edema of the wall unrelated to gallbladder disease in 17 patients. Causes included congestive heart failure (n = 4), renal failure (n = 5), liver disease (hepatic failure [n = 1], hepatitis [n = 6]), ascites (n = 2), hypoalbuminemia (n = 3), pancreatitis (n = 1), blockage of the lymphatic/venous drainage of the gallbladder (n = 2), and prominent Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses (n = 1). More than one abnormality was present in five patients. Striations were focal in 11 of these patients and diffuse in six. The sonographic finding of striated gallbladder wall thickening is no more specific for cholecystitis than the observation of gallbladder wall thickening by itself, and it may occur in a variety of diseases. However, in the clinical setting of acute cholecystitis, the presence of striations suggests gangrenous changes in the gallbladder. The extent of the striations (focal or diffuse) is not useful in predicting the cause of the striated gallbladder wall thickening.
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PMID:Sonography of the gallbladder: significance of striated (layered) thickening of the gallbladder wall. 201 56


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