Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 25-year-old female was admitted for further investigation of the right renal mass, which was noted during evaluation for
hepatitis
. She had no personal or family history of stigmas of tuberous sclerosis. On physical examination, a movable hard smooth mass of fist size was palpable in the right abdomen. Drip infusion pyelography revealed an elevation of right kidney. Ultrasonography revealed that the abdominal mass had a high amplitude echo area. On CT the mass was heterogeneous with irregular margin and had regions of low attenuation value, suspicious of a tumor with high fat content. An angiogram of the right renal artery revealed a hypervascular tumor showing multiple saccular aneurysms, and absence of arteriovenous shunting. Based on the aforementioned findings, the mass was diagnosed as renal
angiomyolipoma
. Partial right nephrectomy was performed through an extraperitoneal approach. Pathological diagnosis was a renal
angiomyolipoma
. Convalescence was uneventful, and the remaining parenchyma of right kidney was working well on drip infusion pyelography three months after operation. The management of renal
angiomyolipoma
from the conservative point of view is also discussed.
...
PMID:[A case of renal angiomyolipoma treated by partial nephrectomy--the management of renal angiomyolipoma from the conservative point of view]. 337 96
At the close of the 20th century, a selection of articles published in 1999 with relevance to liver pathology reflects the wealth of technological and intellectual progress made during the span of the century. Immunohistochemical staining for hepatitis B virus antigens focused attention on a correlation between cytoplasmic expression of core antigen in individuals with precore mutants and higher activity of
hepatitis
. Infection of ducklings with a presurface mutant strain of duck hepatitis B virus produced cytopathic liver cell damage. Fibrosing cholestatic
hepatitis
, originally described as an unusual form of recurrent hepatitis B after liver transplantation, has now been described in hepatitis C virus-positive patients with renal transplants. It may be related to the emergence or selection of hepatitis C virus quasispecies. In biliary tract disease, researchers investigated the canal of Hering as a possible source of hepatic stem cells, sporadic mutations in the JAGGED1 gene (involved in cell differentiation) in Alagille syndrome, and several models of nonsuppurative destructive cholangitis. Further work was accomplished on nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, including a proposal of a grading and staging system as well as its detection in workers exposed to volatile petrochemicals. Among hepatic neoplasms and proliferative disorders, epithelioid hemangioendothelioma,
angiomyolipoma
and Langerhans' cell histiocytosis received coverage in articles describing the diagnostic pathology in collected series of patients.
...
PMID:Pathology of the liver. 1702 77
Preoperative diagnosis of hepatic
angiomyolipoma
is difficult, and the treatment for it remains controversial. The aim of this study is to review our experience in the treatment of hepatic
angiomyolipoma
and to propose a treatment strategy for this disease. We retrospectively collected the clinical, imaging, and pathological features of patients with hepatic
angiomyolipoma
. Immunohistochemical studies with antibodies for HMB-45, actin, S-100, cytokeratin, vimentin, and c-kit were performed. Treatment experience and long-term follow-up results are summarized. During a period of 9 years, 10 patients with hepatic
angiomyolipoma
were treated at our hospital. There was marked female predominance (nine patients). Nine patients received surgical resection without complications. One patient received nonoperative management with biopsy and follow-up. One patient died 11 months after surgery because of recurrent disease. We propose all symptomatic patients should receive surgical resection for hepatic
angiomyolipoma
. Conservative management with close follow-up is suggested in patients with asymptomatic tumors and meet the following criteria: (1) tumor size smaller than 5 cm, (2)
angiomyolipoma
proved through fine needle aspiration biopsy, (3) patients with good compliance, and (4) not a
hepatitis
virus carrier.
...
PMID:Management of hepatic angiomyolipoma. 1743 29
Angiomyolipoma
of the liver is a rare benign mesenchymal tumor, comprising three tissue components: blood vessels, smooth muscles, and adipose cells. Depending on the predominance of these components, tumors are categorized into various types, out of which the myomatous variant is the most rare. Most of these tumors are detected incidentally and are solitary when discovered. Definitive preoperative diagnosis is often difficult because the radiological appearance of hepatic
angiomyolipoma
can be non-specific and varied. This is because the distribution and relative proportion of the three tissue components vary widely from tumor to tumor. Here, we present ultrasonography (US), multidetector computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings with pathological correlations of myomatous
angiomyolipoma
of the liver in a 21-year-old asymptomatic man who had no history of liver disease,
hepatitis
, or tuberous sclerosis. The tumor was hypoechoic on US and showed wash-in in the arterial phase and wash-out in the portal-venous phase on both dynamic contrast-enhanced CT and MRI. Additionally, the lesion was hypointense in the hepato-biliary phase on MRI obtained two hours after gadobenate dimeglumine administration and was not clearly identified from fat tissue in the in-phase/opposed-phase T1-weighted sequences.
...
PMID:Imaging findings in myomatous angiomyolipoma of the liver. 2251 73
The diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is based on imaging studies particularly in high-risk patients without histologic confirmation. This study evaluated the prevalence and characteristics of false-positively diagnosed HCC in a liver resection cohort for HCC. A retrospective review was performed of 837 liver resection cases for clinically diagnosed HCC between 2005 and 2010 at our institute. High-risk patients with tumors > 1 cm with one or two image findings consistent with HCC and tumors < 1 cm with two or more image findings consistent with HCC with persistently increased serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) levels above the normal range with underlying inhibited
hepatitis
activity underwent liver resection. The false-positive rate was 2.2% (n = 18). Of the 18 patients, 7 patients (0.8%) were diagnosed with benign conditions (one each of hemangioma, inflammation, cortical adenoma, dysplastic nodule,
angiomyolipoma
, bile duct adenoma, and non-neoplastic liver parenchyme) and 11 patients (1.3%) were diagnosed with malignancies (cholangiocarcinoma [n = 6], hepatoblastoma [n = 2], and one each of lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma, ovarian cystadenocarcinoma, and nasopharynx carcinoma metastasis). The clinical characteristics of pathologically diagnosed HCC patients were similar (P > 0.05) compared to non-HCC patients except for higher rate of history of alcoholism (P < 0.05) observed in non-HCC patients. Four of 18 non-HCC patients (22.2%) showed diagnostic discordance on the dynamic imaging study. Despite the recent progression in diagnostic imaging techniques, 2.2% of cases were false-positively diagnosed as HCC in a liver resection patient cohort; and the final diagnosis was benign disease in 0.8% of liver resection patients clinically diagnosed with HCC.
...
PMID:False Positive Diagnosis of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Liver Resection Patients. 2804 44