Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reviewed 37 living related liver transplantations (LRLT) performed by our department during the last 27 months on children with end-stage liver disease. The patients were 15 boys and 22 girls aged 7 months to 15 years with biliary atresia (27), cryptogenic cirrhosis (3), Budd-Chiari syndrome (2), progressive intrahepatic cholestasis (2), protoporphyria (1), Wilson's disease (1), and fulminant hepatitis (1). The donors were 14 fathers and 23 mothers. Grafts were made from the left lateral segment (19), left lateral segment with partial S4 (11), left lobe (6), and right lobe (1). After graft harvesting all donors resumed normal liver function and normal life. The recipient underwent total hepatectomy with preservation of the inferior vena cava. FK506 and low-dose steroids were used for immunosuppression. The survival rate was 90% (27/30) in elective cases and 57% (4/7) in emergency cases. Six recipients had functioning grafts but died of extrahepatic complications. Hepatic vein stenosis occurred in 3 cases at 3 months after LRLT and was successfully treated by balloon dilatation. Portal vein stenosis occurred in 1 case at 8 months after LRLT and was also safely dilated. We incurred no hepatic artery thrombosis after introducing microsurgery techniques. Among 12 viral, 5 bacterial, and 3 fungal postoperative infections, 1 Candida pneumonia and 1 EBV-associated lymphoma were lethal. Three patients with ABO-blood group compatible grafts and one with an incompatible graft developed acute rejection, which was controlled in evey case by steroid bolus and/or increasing the dose of FK506. There were no definite episodes of rejection in ABO-identical cases. Children with moderate growth retardation (> or = -1.5 SD of normal growth) caught up in growth soon after LRLT, but those with severe retardation (<-1.5 SD) were slow to attain age-normal height. Appropriate timing, meticulous surgical procedures, and comprehensive management of complications are crucial for successful outcome with LRLT. LRLT is a promising option for alleviating the shortage of livers for pediatric transplantation and may be regarded as an independent modality to supplement cadaver donation.
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PMID:Living related liver transplantation in children. 751 49

Hepatic vein stenosis is a vascular complication that can lead to graft loss after liver transplantation. Although ascites frequently occurs as a symptom of hepatic vein stenosis, the development of severe hypogammaglobulinemia associated with hepatic vein stenosis has not been reported in the literature. An 8-year-old boy underwent living-related liver transplantation (LRLT) because of Wilson disease with chronic hepatic failure. Because de novo autoimmune hepatitis was diagnosed 1 year after LRLT, azathioprine, and prednisolone were added to the baseline immunosuppression of tacrolimus. The patient developed ascites with severe hypogammaglobulinemia (immunoglobulin G [IgG], 288 mg/dL) 2 years after LRLT. Ultrasonography and angiography disclosed stenosis of the hepatic vein. The ascites completely resolved after percutaneous balloon angioplasty. Despite serum IgG trough levels of >500 mg/dL maintained by the addition of immunoglobulin, cytomegalovirus reactivation and sepsis occurred. Serum IgG levels should be monitored to prevent opportunistic infections when hepatic vein stenosis is diagnosed after LRLT.
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PMID:Severe hypogammaglobulinemia associated with hepatic vein stenosis causes cytomegalovirus infection after living-related liver transplantation. 1598 49