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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The critical care environment may be characterized by invasive monitoring, vasoactive drugs, and major interventions which may have adverse effects on gastrointestinal function. Furthermore, conditions such as heart failure or sepsis may compromise oxygen delivery to gastrointestinal organs. Life threatening illness from a variety of causes may produce endoscopically evident
gastritis
or ulceration in up to 100% of patients, and clinically evident bleeding in 20%. Clinical studies suggest that antacids or H2 receptor blockers may reduce the frequency of this complication. Other conditions are associated with a spectrum of hepatic dysfunction ranging from the cholestatic jaundice of reactive hepatopathy during sepsis to centrilobular necrosis and
hepatitis
of shock liver. Additionally, many drugs used in the critical care setting may adversely affect mesenteric oxygen delivery and result in ischemia or infarction of the bowel. An increased awareness and understanding of these and other gastrointestinal complications in critically ill patients will, it is hoped, lead to earlier detection and better therapy than is now available.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal complications in critically ill patients: the intensivists' overview. 396 47
Excluding the most frequent kinds of problems seen with the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAID)--
gastritis
, peptic ulceration and renal effects--published reports indicate that these drugs may cause a wide variety of rare adverse reactions. The most serious of these are hypersensitivity reactions: blood dyscrasias (aplastic anemia, thrombocytopenia, agranulocytosis, hemolytic anemia), erythema multiforme and
hepatitis
. Aseptic meningitis and anaphylactoid reactions may strike patients with underlying immunologic abnormalities; urticaria, bronchospasm and proctocolitis may affect aspirin-sensitive patients. Other unusual reactions include several kinds of bullous dermatitis, febrile reactions, pneumonitis, esophageal ulceration, parotitis, pancreatitis and neurological or psychological effects.
...
PMID:Rare adverse reactions to nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. 398 96
Ethanol is easily absorbed from the intestine and diffuses quickly throughout body water. The bulk of ethanol is metabolized in the liver, where alcohol dehydrogenase, a complex mixture of isoenzymes, oxidizes ethanol to acetaldehyde. Ethanol abuse produces functional and structural changes in the gastrointestinal tract, such as in the stomach, small intestine, liver, and pancreas. Accumulating evidence suggests direct toxicity of ethanol and possibly of acetaldehyde. Fatty liver, alcoholic
hepatitis
, liver cirrhosis, acute and chronic
gastritis
, deranged structure and function of the small intestine, acute and chronic pancreatitis, and pancreatic lithiasis are some of the sequelae of ethanol abuse. Recent investigations have enhanced our understanding of the functional and structural changes of the gastrointestinal tract produced by the abuse of ethanol.
...
PMID:Ethanol, the liver, and the gastrointestinal tract. 719 92
Infection by bacteria, parasites or viruses and tissue inflammation such as
gastritis
,
hepatitis
and colitis are recognized risk factors for human cancers at various sites. Nitric oxide (NO) and other oxygen radicals produced in infected and inflamed tissues could contribute to the process of carcinogenesis by different mechanisms, which are discussed on the basis of authors' studies on liver fluke infection and cholangiocarcinoma development. A similar mechanism could apply to other suspected and known cancer-causing agents including Helicobacter pylori infection (stomach cancer) or asbestos exposure (lung mesothelioma). Studies on the type of tissue and DNA damage produced by NO and by other reactive oxygen species are shedding new light on the molecular mechanisms by which chronic inflammatory processes may initiate or enhance carcinogenesis in humans.
...
PMID:Chronic infections and inflammatory processes as cancer risk factors: possible role of nitric oxide in carcinogenesis. 751 36
A 48-year-old woman with type II diabetes developed fatigue, arthralgia and myalgia. A few weeks later she was found to have hepatomegaly. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was raised (53/93 mm), as were liver enzyme activities (GOT 186 U/l; GPT 240 U/l; gamma-GT 199 U/l), the gamma-globulin levels (40.7%;IgG 4470 mg/dl, IgA 698 mg/dl, IgM 245 mg/dl), antinuclear antibodies and antibodies against double-strand DNA, smooth muscles and actin. Laparoscopy revealed small-nodular liver cirrhosis. The autoimmune
hepatitis
was treated with prednisolone (initially 60 mg daily, then reduced to 10 mg daily) and azathioprine (initially 100 mg daily, reduced to 50 mg daily). The symptoms markedly improved. But one year later, during follow-up examination, gastric polyps were found, excised and histologically found to be carcinoid. The gastrin level was raised to 765 pg/ml. Another year later the liver cirrhosis had advanced further and the type A
gastritis
was still present, but there was no sign of carcinoid recurrence.
...
PMID:[Autoimmune hepatitis, autoimmune gastritis, hypergastrinemia and stomach carcinoid]. 788 17
Although H. pylori is now well established as the aetiological agent of acute or chronic
gastritis
and a predisposing factor in peptic ulceration knowledge regarding the transmission of this organism is unclear. The aim of this study was to examine the prevalence of H. pylori infection in the family members of index children infected with this organism and to examine the role of ethnic background and the relationship of hepatitis A infection to H. pylori infection. The H. pylori status of three groups of subjects, the family members of 21 children shown by endoscopical and histological examination to be infected with H. pylori, the family members of 17 children who had been the index case in a
hepatitis
study and a control group of Australian blood donors and children were examined using an IgG ELISA. The results of this study showed an increased prevalence of H. pylori infection to exist in the family members of index children infected with H. pylori compared with the family members of children not infected with H. pylori and an age matched blood donor control group. This increased prevalence of H. pylori infection was not dependent on ethnic background and appeared to be unrelated to the hepatitis A status of subjects. These results strongly support the view that transmission of H. pylori is person to person and that transmission may not be the faecal oral route.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection within families. 828 Sep 34
During childhood, many people acquire primary infection with cytomegalovirus (CMV), one of the herpes viruses. If they later become immunosuppressed, such as occurs with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, CMV is likely to become reactivated. Severe disease caused by CMV is life-threatening in the HIV-infected population. CMV retinitis,
gastritis
, colitis, pneumonia, encephalitis and
hepatitis
have all been reported, but oral lesions due to infection with CMV are rarely reported. We report a case of oral CMV infection which at first was clinically indistinguishable from HIV-associated periodontal disease.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus infection presenting as acute periodontal infection in a patient infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 838 96
The effects of feeding high and low doses of field bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis) to mice were investigated. Bindweed contains several alkaloids, including pseudotropine, and lesser amounts of tropine, tropinone, and meso-cuscohygrine. Mice fed bindweed exclusively died or were euthanized after 4-7 d and had severe hepatic necrosis and
gastritis
with ulceration or erosions. Mice fed low doses of bindweed along with standard laboratory mouse diet for 6 or 8 w had no clinical disease or gross lesions on necropsy examination but did have histologic lesions of mild multifocal
hepatitis
and
gastritis
.
...
PMID:Toxicity of field bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis) to mice. 859 35
Recently it has been reported that Shosaiko-to (SHO), a traditional Chinese medicine used for treating
gastritis
and
hepatitis
, also has been found useful for treating gastric ulcers, although no pharmacological study has yet investigated the precise antiulcer properties of SHO. Herein, the authors report on the results of a rat study in which the effects of SHO on gastric ulcers, acid secretions and potential difference of gastric mucosa (PD) were studied. SHO (100, 250 or 500 mg /kg, p.o.) significantly inhibited the development of ethanol-induced gastric lesions in a dose-dependent manner. SHO (500 mg/kg, p.o.) significantly inhibited the development of aspirin-,indomethacin- or water-immersion-stress induced gastric lesions. Sucralfate (500 mg/kg, p.o.) inhibited both ethanol- and aspirin-induced gastric lesions, and cimetidine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) inhibited aspirin-, indomethacin- or stress-induced gastric lesions. SHO (10, 30 and 100 mg/kg, i.p.) also significantly inhibited pentagastrin- and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG)-induced gastric acid secretions in a dose-dependent manner, whereas cimetidine (1 mg/kg, i.p.) inhibited a pentagastrin-induced secretion and atropine (0.05 mg/kg, i.p.) inhibited pentagastrin- or 2-DG-induced acid secretions. SHO (250, 500 or 1000 mg/kg, i.g.) significantly inhibited ethanol-induced PD reduction. Sucralfate (500 mg/kg, i.g.) inhibited the reduction, and cimetidine (250 mg/kg, i.g.) didn't inhibit it. These results indicate that SHO not only possesses the capability of protecting the rat gastric mucosa as well as sucralfate, but also is able to inhibit gastric acid secretions like cimetidine or atropine.
...
PMID:[Antiulcer properties of shosaiko-to]. 894 Jul 3
This is a summary of the research topics, of current interest, relating to digestive disease in Korea. This review is based on the subjects of the papers that were accepted for presentation at the 34th Annual Meeting of the Korean Society of Gastroenterology and the 39th Semiannual Meeting of the Korean Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy held November 22-24, 1995, in Seoul. The most popular topics were on Helicobacter pylori infection. These included experimental papers on the pathogenesis of bacteria-associated
gastritis
and the duodenal ulcer. Recently, the increase in the number of papers published on the motility of the gastrointestinal and pancreaticobiliary tracts is quite remarkable. Molecular genetic works on oncogenesis using cultured tumour cell lines, on the enzyme expression in the biopsied mucosal cells of the small intestine, and on the various expressions of viral genomes in the hepatocytes are among these recent topics of research. Clinical works, such as therapeutic endoscopy in malignant diseases and therapeutic trials in the
hepatitis
virus-associated chronic liver diseases are also popular topics.
...
PMID:Current topics on digestive disease in Korea. 919 93
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