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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rat, an inbred mutant rat derived from the Long-Evans strain, is characterized by spontaneous
hepatitis
due to gross accumulation of hepatic Cu. The accumulation, accompanied by marked induction of metallothionein (MT), is believed to be due to the inherent lack of output of Cu into the bile duct and blood vessels. In this study, the acute effect of tetrathiomolybdate (TTM), a chelator for output of hepatic Cu and Cd in LEC rats treated with Cd, was investigated. Female LEC rats were injected subcutaneously with Cd (Cd; 1.0 mg/kg) to induce Cd, Cu-MT. Fischer rats were treated with Cd (Cd; 1.0 mg/kg) and Cu (Cu; 3.0 mg/kg). Forty-eight hours after the injections of metals, TTM (5 mg/kg bw) was injected intravenously under
anesthesia
. The TTM injection rapidly stimulated biliary excretions of Cu (at a microgram/ml level) and Cd (at a ng/ml level). Furthermore, Cu and Cd concentrations were increased in serum sampled 60 min after the TTM injection. The increase of biliary Cu excretion was not accompanied by increased biliary excretion of MT. The TTM injection caused the hepatic Cu concentrations to decrease from 306 +/- 2 to 262 +/- 12 and from 43 +/- 6 to 20 +/- 5 micrograms/g in LEC and Fischer rats, respectively. The hepatic Cd concentration was not decreased by TTM treatment. Hepatic MT and Cu, but not Cd, concentrations in the MT fraction were also reduced by TTM injection. Our results showed that TTM can rapidly remove Cu from MT to increase bile and blood Cu levels. The output of Cd stimulated by TTM injection may be related to MT reduction resulting from removal of MT-bound Cu. Our results indicate that to avoid the toxic effect of Cu, TTM injection is an effective initial treatment, although it remains to be established how metals, including Cu, are finally metabolized.
...
PMID:Outputs of hepatic copper and cadmium stimulated by tetrathiomolybdate (TTM) injection in Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rats pretreated with cadmium, and in Fischer rats pretreated with copper and cadmium. 916 Jan 8
Halogenated volatile anesthetics have been associated with liver injury. Most reported cases have been linked to halothane and enflurane. Cross-sensitization between the latter agents has also been documented. Isoflurane
hepatitis
is extremely rare, and only a few convincing cases have been published. Moreover, clinical cases of cross-sensitization of isoflurance with other haloalkanes have not been reported. We describe a case of hepatic dysfunction 2 weeks after isoflurance
anesthesia
in a 35-year-old obese woman with a previous history of halothane
hepatitis
. The diagnosis was made on the basis of exposure to isoflurance, the delay between the time of exposure and the onset of jaundice, and the exclusion of other causes of liver dysfunction. This case reiterates the recommendation that patients who sustain liver injury from one haloalkane should not be exposed to another.
...
PMID:Isoflurane hepatotoxicity in a patient with a previous history of halothane-induced hepatitis. 963 41
Blood loss from major orthopedic procedures such as spine and revision total joint arthroplasty often necessitates perioperative blood transfusion. The risk of infectious disease transmission associated with homologous blood transfusion, particularly
hepatitis
and acquired immune deficiency syndrome, mandates use of blood conservation techniques. Methods available to the orthopedic surgeon include preoperative autologous donation, intraoperative and postoperative blood salvage, hemodilution, and other selective anesthetic techniques such as hypotensive
anesthesia
and epidural or spinal
anesthesia
. The safest blood patients can receive is their own. With full use of these blood conservation methods, the need for homologous blood transfusion for elective orthopedic procedures should be minimal.
...
PMID:Blood conservation in revision total hip arthroplasty. 1014 34
Anesthesiologists as well as patients are at risk for acquiring blood-borne infections such as
hepatitis
and AIDS. We surveyed 2,530 anesthesiologists, a 10% random sample of the members of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, with a response rate of 57.1%, to determine the incidence of accidental needlestick exposure among
anesthesia
personnel and whether anesthesiologists are adhering to infection control guidelines to protect themselves and their patients from exposure to infectious diseases. Eighty-eight percent of respondents reported at least 1 accidental needlestick in the past 10 years; 21% received a needlestick from a high-risk patient and 4.5% a needlestick from a known HIV-positive patients. Residents reported significantly more accidental needlesticks from known HIV-positive patients (8.5%). Mucous membrane, open cut, eye, or other significant exposure to HIV-contaminated blood or body fluids was sustained by 8.34% of respondents in the past 10 years. Sixty percent of respondents reported they almost never reuse common syringes now compared with a 40.8% non-reuse rate (P < 0.001) in a similar survey on infection control practices conducted in 1990. Sixty-three percent reported they almost never reuse a vasopressor syringe compared with the 1990 non-reuse rate of 52.5% (P < 0.001). In the current survey, 39% of anesthesiologists reported reusing syringes from one patient to another and 36% reported reusing the same vasopressor syringes for different patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Accidental needlesticks: do anesthesiologists practice proper infection control precautions? 1015 Mar 51
During the period from July 1995 to June 1996 we performed transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) on 824 patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Among them, 13 were dementia patients between 74 and 96 years old; they presented with urinary hesitancy in 6, retention in 4, frequency in 2 and incontinence in 1 patient. Past history included stroke in 7, hypertension in 6, pulmonary tuberculosis in 4, diabetes in 3, asthma in 2, angina pectoris in 1, Parkinson's disease in 1, pneumonia in 1, and
hepatitis
in 1. Careful preoperative examination revealed that they were proper candidates for TURP. They underwent TURP under spinal
anesthesia
. The mean operative time was 34 min, ranging from 20 to 60 min. The adenoma resected weighed 24 g on the average, ranging from 7.5 to 48 g. During surgery, although hypotension was noted in 2 patients, there was no serious morbidity. Their mental condition was well controlled with ketamine and diazepam during and after surgery. Postoperative complications included acute myocardial infarction in 1, multiple gastric ulcer in 1, and decubitus in 1. None died within 3 months after TURP, 3 died there after, and 10 patients were alive at the mean follow-up period of 26 months. Six patients reported good urination, 3 reported some improvement in urination after surgery, although requiring intermittent catheterization and 1 developed mild incontinence. In conclusion, TURP appears to provide some benefit in selected patients with dementia and should not be considered to be a contraindication for such patients.
...
PMID:[Transurethral resection of the prostate for patients with dementia]. 1036 42
A consecutive series of 16 patients with classical Haemophilia underwent 21 total knee replacements between 1989 and 1997 for haemophilic arthropathy. The patients received Factor VIII replacement therapy via continuous infusion, and fibrin glue was used to facilitate haemostasis. Three different types of prostheses were used. A follow-up evaluation was undertaken between 2 and 10 years after the operation (mean 5.6 years) and two patients with infection were excluded. Knee scores averaged 77.5 (pre-operative 24. 1) and functional scores averaged 84.4 (preoperative 23.2). There were no cases with aseptic loosening of the prosthesis. Complications included one early deep infection controlled by conversion of the TKR into an arthrodesis, one case of late septic loosening that had to be re-operated upon, one case of patellar dislocation, two cases of stiff knee (fibro-arthrosis) that required manipulation under
anaesthesia
, one postoperative
hepatitis
, one superficial infection treated by incision and drainage and four febrile patients with no clear source of infection, who responded to antibiotics alone. In conclusion, TKR offers haemophilic patients a long-lasting improvement of their quality of life and we therefore advocate its use with the appropriate indications.
...
PMID:Orthopaedic outcome of total knee replacement in haemophilia A. 1078 Nov 97
A 76-year-old Caucasian woman developed fulminant hepatic necrosis 6 days after an uneventful operation under isoflurane
anaesthesia
. Laboratory findings included elevated bilirubin, grossly elevated transaminases and prolonged prothrombin time. Radiological investigation showed no evidence of extra-hepatic disease. Serological studies were negative for acute viral hepatitis and autoimmune disease. The patient may have been previously sensitized by exposure to isoflurane 3 years previously but antibodies to tri-fluoro acetate, present in 70% of cases of halothane
hepatitis
, were not detected in pre-operative or postoperative samples of blood. On the seventh postoperative day the patient died and postmortem examination demonstrated centrilobular necrosis of the liver, with a histological pattern similar to changes associated with halothane
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Fatal hepatotoxicity after re-exposure to isoflurane: a case report and review of the literature. 1095 25
A phylogenetic hepatitis C virus (HCV) assay based on the core-Envelope 1 (C-E1) region was developed and used to elucidate a case of a patient-to-patient transmission. The index patient showed clinical symptoms of
hepatitis
seven weeks after surgery for hallux valgus under general
anaesthesia
. She progressed to a chronic persistent infection as indicated by positive HCV PCR results two years after surgery. Before her operation, a patient with HCV antibodies and positive HCV PCR had undergone surgery in the same room. There were two possibilities whereby the index patient could have been infected with hepatitis C, either through her work as a nurse or by transmission during surgery. By sequencing the 5' non-coding region PCR product, we found that both patients were infected with genotype 1a. Phylogenetic analysis with the variable C-E1 region suggested that the two patients clustered together with a bootstrap 100% in a tree with 75 sequence references. We further performed a phylogenetic analysis in this region with the genotype 1a reference sequences and an additional 25 genotype 1a sequences consecutively collected from Danish patients with HCV. The two patients still clustered together, supported by a high bootstrap 1000 value of 999. Homology analyses combined with the epidemiological findings indicate that the patient operated on in the same room before the index case was the most likely source of transmission. The mode of transmission could not be conclusively established, but a reusable part of the anaesthetic respiratory circuit is a possibility and a well known risk.
...
PMID:A phylogenetic analysis elucidating a case of patient-to-patient transmission of hepatitis C virus during surgery. 1143 17
Physical examination, clinical laboratory testing, and medical imaging are effective in establishing the presence of liver disease; however, they infrequently establish a definitive diagnosis. Morphologic evaluation of liver tissue is generally accepted as a valuable diagnostic tool in establishing a diagnosis in liver disease. Clinicians have several options for obtaining specimens for morphologic evaluation, including surgically obtained wedge biopsies, percutaneous core biopsies, and fine-needle aspiration specimens. Surgical and core biopsy procedures require
anesthesia
or sedation and have a substantial risk of bleeding complications. Fine-needle aspiration usually does not require sedation and is rarely associated with hemorrhage; thus, it is frequently chosen for animals that are poor anesthetic risks or have coagulopathies. Diseases like malignant lymphoma, hepatic lipidosis, and suppurative
hepatitis
are readily diagnosed cytologically, whereas hepatocellular adenomas, hyperplastic nodules, fibrosis, and chronic inflammation are more difficult to identify cytologically.
...
PMID:Liver cytology. 1246 95
The halogenated inhalational anaesthetics halothane, enflurane, isoflurane and desflurane can produce metabolic hepatocellular injury in humans to a variable extent. During metabolism of these anaesthetics, tissue acetylation occurs due to the formation of reactive intermediates. Proteins modified by acetylation may constitute neo-antigens with a potential for triggering an antibody-mediated immune response. The likelihood of suffering post-operative immune
hepatitis
depends on the amount of the anaesthetic metabolized and is thereby considerably less with enflurane, isoflurane or desflurane compared with halothane. Plasma inorganic fluoride concentrations are regularly increased after sevoflurane. Elevated inorganic fluoride concentrations have been associated with nephrotoxicity following methoxyflurane
anaesthesia
but not after sevoflurane. Another source of concern is the products of degradation from reactions with carbon dioxide absorbents. Most important is compound A, which has been shown to exhibit nephrotoxicity in rodents. However, no significant changes in renal function parameters have been reported in surgical patients.
...
PMID:Halogenated inhalational anaesthetics. 1275 47
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