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

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is among the 10 most common tumors in the world. However, incidence is not evenly distributed across the world. In many instances, the proximate cause for the tumor can be identified. Chronic hepatitis B infection is probably the most common cause, followed by chronic hepatitis C. Other important causes are alcoholic liver disease, hemochromatosis, alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, and other chronic liver diseases. Although proximate causes may be identifiable, pathogenesis remains uncertain. Factors that may be important include the presence of Aflatoxin B1 in food, genetic changes induced by the hepatitis B virus, and repeated rounds of necrosis and regeneration, also induced by hepatitis viruses. The genes involved and the mutations necessary for hepatic carcinogenesis are unknown, with the sole exception of the p53 gene, which is probably a late phenomenon. Screening for HCC is widely practiced despite the lack of evidence of improved survival. The screening tests used include alphafetoprotein levels and ultrasonography. Screening can identify small tumors; however, survival may not be improved, because the presence of cirrhosis may limit the number of patients who can undergo resections; recurrences or second primary tumors are common; and the presence of chronic liver disease means that survival may be limited anyway. There are many different forms of therapy available; unfortunately, most have not been compared in randomized controlled trials. Surgery remains the therapy of choice if feasible. All other therapy is palliative, including chemotherapy, chemoembolization, hepatic artery embolization, various forms of radiotherapy, and various forms of ablative therapy.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma. 753 16

We have recently noted a hitherto undescribed hepatic hemosiderosis confined to endothelial cells of the portal tract in chronic viral hepatitis. In this study, this lesion was surveyed in 156 liver biopsy specimens from patients with chronic hepatitis C and in 21 liver biopsy specimens from patients with chronic hepatitis B. As controls, we examined 110 liver biopsy specimens from patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), 36 from patients with alcoholic liver injury, nine from patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), and five from patients with primary hemochromatosis. Hemosiderin deposition was found in the endothelial cells of venous vessels in portal tracts regardless of the presence or degree of hemosiderin deposition in hepatic parenchyma. This phenomenon was observed in 65 of 156 cases (42%) of chronic hepatitis C and in eight of 21 (38%) cases of chronic hepatitis B. In controls, this lesion was frequent in AIH (78%), but infrequent in PBC (8.1%) and alcoholic liver injury (11%). The incidence of this lesion showed significant differences between chronic hepatitis C, B, and AIH, and between PBC and alcoholic liver injury. There was a positive correlation between the progression of disease and the incidence of this feature in chronic viral hepatitis; the incidence was 18.3% and 11.1% in milder chronic hepatitis C and B, respectively, and 61.2% and 58.3%, respectively, in more severe cases. However, this correlation was not evident in either PBC or alcoholic liver injury. This hemosiderin deposition was positively correlated with the degree of piecemeal necrosis in chronic hepatitis C, and to a lesser degree, the positive correlation was shown in chronic hepatitis B. These findings suggest that the progression of chronic hepatitis and the piecemeal necrosis in chronic hepatitis C and B, followed by the release of hepatocellular iron to portal and periportal areas, are directly or indirectly responsible for endothelial hemosiderosis. Further studies focusing on this peculiar phenomenon in relation to choice of therapy and evaluation of chronicity of viral hepatitis are encouraged.
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PMID:Hemosiderin deposition in portal endothelial cells: a novel hepatic hemosiderosis frequent in chronic viral hepatitis B and C. 755 40

This is the first reported case, to our knowledge, of hypoparathyroidism and hypothyroidism due to secondary hemochromatosis with onset during childhood. The patient was a boy with refractory aplastic anemia in whom primary hypothyroidism and hypoparathyroidism became apparent at the age of 10 and 11 years old, respectively. He had received a total of 100 L of transfused blood by the age of 10 years. The patient showed poor annual height gain due to primary hypothyroidism, together with hypocalcemia, cataract and intracranial calcification due to hypoparathyroidism. The early appearance of both thyroid and parathyroid dysfunction in this patient may have been due to the delay of initiation of iron-chelating agents and liver dysfunction due to hepatitis type C.
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PMID:Hypothyroidism and hypoparathyroidism in an 11 year old boy with hemochromatosis secondary to aplastic anemia. 757 61

Seventy-two long-surviving liver transplant recipients were evaluated prospectively, including a baseline allograft biopsy for weaning off of immunosuppression. Thirteen were removed from candidacy because of chronic rejection (n = 4), hepatitis (n = 2), patient anxiety (n = 5), or lack of cooperation by the local physician (n = 2). The other 59, aged 12-68 years, had stepwise drug weaning with weekly or biweekly monitoring of liver function tests. Their original diagnoses were PBC (n = 9), HCC (n = 1), Wilson's disease (n = 4), hepatitides (n = 15), Laennec's cirrhosis (n = 1), biliary atresia (n = 16), cystic fibrosis (n = 1), hemochromatosis (n = 1), hepatic trauma (n = 1), alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency (n = 9), and secondary biliary cirrhosis (n = 1). Most of the patients had complications of long-term immunosuppression, of which the most significant were renal dysfunction (n = 8), squamous cell carcinoma (n = 2) or verruca vulgaris of skin (n = 9), osteoporosis and/or arthritis (n = 12), obesity (n = 3), hypertension (n = 11), and opportunistic infections (n = 2). When azathioprine was a third drug, it was stopped first. Otherwise, weaning began with prednisone, using the results of corticotropin stimulation testing as a guide. If adrenal insufficiency was diagnosed, patients reduced to < 5 mg/day prednisone were considered off of steroids. The baseline agents (azathioprine, cyclosporine, or FK506) were then gradually reduced in monthly decrements. Complete weaning was accomplished in 16 patients (27.1%) with 3-19 months drug-free follow-up, is progressing in 28 (47.4%), and failed in 15 (25.4%) without graft losses or demonstrable loss of graft function from the rejections. This and our previous experience with self-weaned and other patients off of immunosuppression indicate that a significant percentage of appropriately selected long-surviving liver recipients can unknowingly achieve drug-free graft acceptance. Such attempts should not be contemplated until 5-10 years posttransplantation and then only with careful case selection, close monitoring, and prompt reinstitution of immunosuppression when necessary.
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PMID:Weaning of immunosuppression in long-term liver transplant recipients. 783 42

The histology of 72 livers from 72 children who underwent liver transplantation was reviewed. Nine children (12.5%) had hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and/or liver cell dysplasia (LCD) in their native livers. Ages at the time of transplantation ranged from 2 months to 11 years. Primary liver diseases included tyrosinemia (3), biliary atresia (2), chronic active hepatitis B (1), chronic active non-A non-B non-C hepatitis (1), idiopathic neonatal hepatitis (1), and neonatal iron storage disease (1). Explanted livers showed large multifocal HCC in two cases, incidental HCC in three, and dysplastic nodules in four. LCD also was present in three cases in conjunction with HCC. All patients had cirrhosis. Alpha-fetoprotein was measured in six children and was elevated in all six (range, 300 to 1,770,000 ng/mL; normal, 0 to 15 ng/mL). Abdominal computed tomography, ultrasonography, and/or magnetic resonance imaging showed large masses in two cases, but did not detect the tumors of less than 2 cm or the dysplastic nodules in the other seven children. After a follow-up period of 2 months to 3 years (mean, 19.8 +/- 12.1 months), eight children are alive and have no evidence of recurrence. The patient with neonatal iron storage disease died 2 months after transplantation, without evidence of tumor recurrence. The authors conclude that children with end-stage liver disease of diverse causes referred for liver transplantation may have LCD and/or HCC. Serial determination of alpha-fetoprotein and images studies may detect early lesions curable by liver transplantation.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma and liver cell dysplasia in children with chronic liver disease. 784 22

The aim of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of percutaneous liver biopsy and screening for hepatitis C virus antibodies with 1st and 2nd generation ELISA in asymptomatic blood donors with persistent (> 1 year) and moderate elevation (> 1.5 times the upper limit of normal) of serum alanine aminotransferase. The diagnosis was established from clinical, biological and ultrasound data before biopsies were obtained, then compared to the histological diagnosis. Thirty one of 56 blood donors who satisfied the preceding criteria accepted liver biopsy and were subsequently included in the study. An accurate diagnosis was proposed before biopsy in 20 cases. This was in agreement with the histological results in 19 cases but in 2 of these, unexpected lobular hepatitis was associated with the expected steatosis. Positive hepatitis C virus tests corresponded to chronic hepatitis in all cases (n = 5). No accurate diagnosis could be proposed in the 11 remaining cases owing to the lack of evidence of any etiology (n = 4) or because several potential etiologies were possible for the same subject (n = 7). Histological diagnoses were: isolated steatosis (n = 12), steatosis associated with lobular hepatitis (n = 7) or with chronic persistent hepatitis (n = 1), chronic active (n = 2) or chronic persistent hepatitis (n = 3), alcoholic hepatitis (n = 2), hemochromatosis (n = 1), and normal liver (n = 3). Liver biopsy is essential to the accurate etiological diagnosis of persistent and moderate elevation of aminotransferases despite hepatitis virus C tests which are associated with the correct diagnosis of chronic hepatitis in 16% of cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Contribution of liver biopsy and serology of hepatitis C virus to the diagnosis of a moderate and prolonged elevation of aminotransferases]. 846 69

In 1986, our institution published the first results of surgical resection of hepatocarcinoma in cirrhotic patients. The aim of this paper is to present long term results of this surgical management. From April 1978 to February 1992, 74 patients were operated on at the surgical clinic of University Medical Center of Rennes (35000) France. There were 60 hepatectomies and 14 transplantations. The mean age was 60.2 years +/- 9 years and the sex ratio: 70 males and 4 females. The etiology was alcoholic in 43 patients (58%), post hepatitis (B and C) in 22 patients (30%) and due to hemochromatosis in 9 patients (12%). According to the Child Pugh classification, 48 patients were Child A, 11 Child B and one Child C in the hepatectomy group and 9 patients Child A and 5 Child B in transplantation group. The operative mortality was 10% in hepatectomy group and 35.7% in liver transplantation group. Overall survival was 61.8% at 1 year, 47.1% at 2 years, 38.2% at 3 years and 20% at 5 years. 5 year survival is 21.4% after transplantation and 18.5% after resection. This difference is not significant. In conclusion, according to 5 years survival and to operative mortality the treatment of choice is hepatectomy in HCC in cirrhotic patients. However the best treatment is the prevention of cirrhosis.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of hepatocarcinoma in cirrhosis]. 854 50

We describe three men and two women, aged 18-50, with an occasional finding of increased aspartate and alanine aminotransferase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase levels in the absence of any drug treatment and past or current alcohol abuse. Two patients were overweight (body mass index 29 and 32, respectively) and physical examination was normal in all but one case. Tests for hepatitis A, B and C, Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, toxoplasma and autoimmune hepatitis were negative and metabolic diseases (Wilson's disease, haemochromatosis, alpha-l-antitrypsin deficiency) were excluded by specific tests. Ultrasound liver scan revealed massive steatosis in all patients. Liver histology showed diffuse steatosis and parenchymal inflammation in all cases, with concomitant fibrosis and Mallory bodies in three of them. Findings were consistent with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, a rare condition with potential progression to cirrhosis in a minority of cases. This disease, for which no treatment is currently available, must be considered in all subjects with elevated aminotransferases, in the absence of known causes of liver damage.
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PMID:Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Report of five cases and review of the literature. 878 33

Twenty years after the first surveys of liver disease were done cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma were still found to be the most important liver diseases in Papua New Guinea. Hepatitis B virus appears to be the main cause of both these conditions. Data from a number of different sources suggest a prevalence of hepatitis B positivity of about 17%. The most significant new finding was grade 3 iron deposition in 8 patients. This raises the question as to whether iron storage disease may now contribute to the spectrum of liver disease in Papua New Guinea. Many biopsies in the 1960s and 1980s were interpreted as nonspecific hepatitis; in the light of recent observations, at least some of these may have been due to hepatitis C infection.
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PMID:Liver disease in Papua New Guinea 1981 to 1988, twenty years after the first surveys were done. 857 80

Asymptomatic patients with abnormal results on liver function test pose a diagnostic challenge. In general, determinations of routinely ordered tests of liver function are neither sensitive nor specific for liver disease. Fatty liver, alcohol-related liver damage and chronic viral hepatitis are the most common causes of abnormal liver function test results in asymptomatic patients. Causes of asymptomatic liver disease include hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, drug toxicity, chronic autoimmune hepatitis, biliary cirrhosis, sclerosing cholangitis, alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and sarcoidosis. The most efficient screening tests for liver damage are alanine transaminase, alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin. Repeat testing when results are abnormal, and use of ancillary tests, such as creatine phosphokinase or gamma-glutamyl-transferase, may confirm liver damage. Imaging studies help exclude biliary obstruction or neoplasm. Treatable illnesses should be ruled out. Three to six months of observation for progressive symptoms and liver dysfunction may follow. After the period of observation, further laboratory tests, a diagnostic liver biopsy and/or referral to gastroenterologist may be needed.
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PMID:Evaluating asymptomatic patients with abnormal liver function test results. 862 23


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