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)

Indications, selection of donor and recipient, medical and surgical management and complications, problems of organ procurement. Renal transplantation has become routine therapy. Organs are predominantly obtained from cadavers, transplantations from living donors are rarely indicated. Advances in preservation methods have improved organ quality and prolonged storage time. Selection of the most suitable recipient is based on histocompatibility matching. Blood transfusions before transplantation seem to improve the results. Recognition of a rejection crisis is primarily based on clinical symptoms. Persistent rejection calls for prompt explantation and the patient has to return to dialysis. Infections, serum-hepatitis and gastro-intestinal bleeding are the most common complications. Late complicatons are diabetes mellitus, cirrhosis of the liver, osteopathy, recurring glomerulonephritis, and, rarely, malignomas. Transplantation frequency in the Federal Republic of Germany could be increased by more awareness of physicians and a better knowledge of the general public about the need for cadaver donors.
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PMID:[Kidney transplantation from a nephrological-urological viewpoint--results and problems. 2. Diagnosis and therapy after transplantation, complications, long-term results]. 33 52

In the last eighteen years, from 1972 to 1989, around 150 cases of Wilson's disease have been diagnosed in Costa Rica (6/100.000 inhabitants). In the San Juan de Dios Hospital, 120 cases have been studied during this period, seven of whom died with a picture of acute hepatic insufficiency, hemolytic anemia, encephalopathy, intestinal bleeding and renal insufficiency. In four of the cases, postmortem histopathologic studies were done with high resolution microscopy, which revealed extensive submassive necrosis of the liver, with severe cholestatic, lytic and acidophilic necrosis with nodular, irregular regeneration and specially microvacuolar steatosis, different from that observed in other forms of fulminant hepatitis. With the clinical, laboratory and histopathologic findings, we concluded that fulminant Wilson's disease is a well-defined pathological clinical entity of fatal evolution with no response to therapy, including early treatment with penicillamine and steroids.
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PMID:[Fulminant Wilson's disease in Costa Rica. Clinico-pathological study of 7 cases]. 215 63

Sarcoidosis is a chronic multisystem disorder of unknown cause characterized by the presence of noncaseating epitheloid granulomas and derangement of the normal skin architecture. Though an array of organs may be affected by the disease the most common site of affection is the lung. An extrathoratic manifestation is rare. We describe a 66-year-old patient who was admitted to our hospital because of weight loss and hepatomegaly. A thorough examination revealed the diagnosis of a granulomatous hepatitis characterized by a markedly elevated alkaline phosphatase concentration of 1,490 U/I. A drug-induced hepatitis could be excluded and no evidence was found for the existence of a bacterial or viral infection or an autoimmune disorder. An ERCP revealed a normal common bile duct and normally branching small intrahepatic ducts. The patient was discharged with the diagnosis of a biliary cirrhosis. Half a year later the patient was readmitted to the hospital because of severe intestinal bleeding due to pancytopenia. A bone marrow biopsy showed infiltration of the marrow by granulomas. A histiocytosis X could be ruled out. The diagnosis of an extrathoracic sarcoidosis was assumed and a therapy with prednisone was started. Within six weeks the blood count normalized. After 18 months the serum alkaline phospatase concentration also normalized and no granulomas were found in the bone marrow. The case demonstrates that pancytopenia in sarcoidosis is not due to bone marrow failure.
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PMID:[Granulomatous hepatitis and myelitis: an unusual manifestation of extrapulmonary sarcoidosis]. 1019 Feb 49

Typhoid fever currently is an uncommon disease in western countries, and cases usually are imported from endemic areas.1 The most common complications are intestinal bleeding or perforation and necrotizing cholecystitis, although hepatitis, myocarditis, nephritis, and meningitis may occur. Spontaneous spleen rupture during typhoid fever is a known but rare complication. This report describes a new case and reviews the literature.
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PMID:Spontaneous spleen rupture during typhoid fever. 1073 49

3 patients with liver failure developed hepatic encephalopathy. 2 patients, men aged 60 and 72 years, had chronic liver disease and presented with episodes of confusion. They recovered after being treated with lactulose. The third patient, a 37-year-old woman, became comatose shortly after the onset of acute liver failure due to acute autoimmune hepatitis. She died before a suitable donor liver became available. Hepatic encephalopathy is a syndrome of potential reversible neurological symptoms. Especially in the early stages of the condition, hepatic encephalopathy can be difficult to diagnose. Patients may present with mild cognitive impairment or episodes characterized by neurological symptoms. Hepatic encephalopathy is a clinical diagnosis. The pathophysiologic mechanism is only partly understood but toxicity of ammonia on the central nervous system seems to be of major importance. Raised ammonia concentrations or EEG findings consistent with metabolic encephalopathy may support but are not essential to the diagnosis. Episodes of hepatic encephalopathy are often elicited by an underlying disease such as infection or gastro-intestinal bleeding. It is important to recognize hepatic encephalopathy in its early stages because adequate treatment of the condition and any underlying disease reduces morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:[Confusion and abnormal liver enzyme levels: problems with diagnosing hepatic encephalopathy]. 1836 Nov 99

The authors presents the clinical case of autoimmune overlap syndrome: autoimmune hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis with outcomes in the hepatic cirrhosis complicated fatal intestinal bleeding.
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PMID:[Syndrome of overlap of autoimmune hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis with the outcome in cirrhosis of the liver, complicated by fatal bleeding in the small intestine]. 2394 68