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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (hepatocellular carcinoma)
71,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The main complications of cirrhosis are gastrointestinal bleeding related to portal hypertension, ascites, spontaneous peritonitis, hepato-renal syndrome, encephalopathy and hepatocellular carcinoma. The apparition of these complications constitutes a major event for the patient. In addition to the etiological treatment, take charge of complications can improve the prognosis of the patients.
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PMID:[Managing the complications of cirrhosis]. 1625 97

Laparoscopic surgery is a relatively new option for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) on cirrhosis. To date, there have been only a few reports of this option for this pathology in the literature, probably because of the intra operative difficulties related to the treatment of this pathology (even at laparotomy) and because of the problems related to the minimally invasive approach (technical difficulties, complicated management of the bleeding, lack of dedicate tools, and fear of gas embolism). In this article we report four patients from our whole series (23 laparoscopic liver resections for HCC) who underwent a laparoscopic resection for completely exophytic HCC on cirrhosis, located in segment IV in two patients, and in segment III and segment V respectively, in the other two. The mean operative time was 116 min (range, 90-150 min). The Pringle maneuver was never performed. No blood transfusions were needed. No postoperative complications occurred, neither ascites, nor jaundice, nor encephalopathy. Postoperative liver function returned to the preoperative level within 3 days. Food intake started on postoperative day 2. The patients were discharged on postoperative days 5 (one patient), 6 (two patients), and 7 (one patient) after uncomplicated courses. In our opinion, limited laparoscopic liver resections could be considered, at present, to be the best option for the treatment of extremely rare protruding HCC on cirrhosis. We believe that a minimally invasive approach can minimize the postoperative morbidity rate, which is still too high in this group of patients. Our experience confirmed that nonanatomical limited resections or anatomical left lateral segmentectomies for HCC on cirrhosis are feasible and safe in the hands of surgeons trained in both open liver surgery and advanced laparoscopic surgery.
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PMID:Laparoscopic hepatic resection for completely exophytic hepatocellular carcinoma on cirrhosis. 1636 25

Large databases of consecutive patients followed for sufficiently long periods are needed to establish the rates, chronology, and hierarchy of complications of cirrhosis as well as the importance of other potential causes of liver disease. In accordance with this goal, a cohort of patients with compensated cirrhosis due to hepatitis C virus (HCV) was followed for 17 years. Two hundred and fourteen HCV RNA-seropositive patients with Child-Pugh class A cirrhosis who had no previous clinical decompensation were prospectively recruited and followed up with periodic clinical and abdominal ultrasound examinations. During 114 months (range 1-199), hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) developed in 68 (32%), ascites in 50 (23%), jaundice in 36 (17%), upper gastrointestinal bleeding in 13 (6%), and encephalopathy in 2 (1%), with annual incidence rates of 3.9%, 2.9%, 2.0%, 0.7%, and 0.1%, respectively. Clinical status remained unchanged in 154 (72%) and progressed to Child-Pugh class B in 45 (21%) and class C in 15 (7%). HCC was the main cause of death (44%) and the first complication to develop in 58 (27%) patients, followed by ascites in 29 (14%), jaundice in 20 (9%), and upper gastrointestinal bleeding in 3 (1%). The annual mortality rate was 4.0% per year and was higher in patients with other potential causes of liver disease than in those without them (5.7% vs. 3.6%; P = .04). In conclusion, hepatitis C-related cirrhosis is a slowly progressive disease that may be accelerated by other potential causes of liver disease. HCC was the first complication to develop and the dominant cause for increased mortality.
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PMID:The natural history of compensated cirrhosis due to hepatitis C virus: A 17-year cohort study of 214 patients. 1672 98

Cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) frequently develop hepatic encephalopathy. Metabolic etiology of encephalopathy is less often considered in these patients. Although paraneoplastic hypercalcemia may be associated with several malignant tumors, it has also been described in HCC [1-4], and may cause neurologic disturbances. We present a case of hypercalcemic encephalopathy in a patient with hepatic cirrhosis and underlying HCC in whom first diagnostic was hepatic encephalopathy.
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PMID:Hypercalcemic encephalopathy in a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma. 1742 30

This is a retrospective longitudinal follow-up study of 25 HIV/HCV positive cirrhotic patients not responding to peg-IFN plus ribavirin, and 25 untreated controls matched for age (+/-5 years), gender and Child-Pugh score. The primary endpoint of the study was the incidence of cirrhosis progression (CP) defined as the occurrence of at least one of the following events: death, ascites, jaundice, encephalopathy, gastrointestinal bleeding and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). During the median follow-up of 54 months (34-89), four treated (16%) and 13 untreated patients (52%) experienced CP (p = 0.02). Poisson's regression model showed that the independent predictors of CP were Peg-IFN therapy (p = 0.016), positive HIV-RNA (p = 0.024), and altered ALP values (p = 0.012). Peg-IFN therapy seems to slow down the rate of cirrhosis progression also in HIV/HCV co-infected patients nonresponders to anti-HCV therapy, in comparison with untreated patients.
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PMID:Rate of cirrhosis progression reduced in HIV/HCV co-infected non-responders to anti-HCV therapy. 1780 5

Liver cirrhosis is the end-stage of chronic liver disease. Even at the compensated stage complications are multiple, severe and potentially fatal which are related to liver insufficiency, portal hypertension and a pre-cancerous stage. It is now possible to diagnose cirrhosis through non invasive tools like biochemical scores and Fibroscan. It may be reversible provided adequate counselling about excessive alcohol intake and metabolic syndrome and specific treatments such as antivirals, venesection, immunosuppressive therapies are implemented. The role of the general practitioner is to diagnosis and treat cirrhosis early together with the hepatogastroenterologist. He can also, through simple means, prevent complications such as hepatocellular carcinoma, variceal bleeding, overt encephalopathy and renal failure and liver decompensation after surgery.
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PMID:[How to prevent complications of liver cirrhosis?]. 1795 20

A young patient with hepatocellular carcinoma receiving chemotherapy presented with encephalopathy. Evaluation of the patient revealed a metabolic profile consistent with ornithine transcarbamoylase (OTC) deficiency, an inherited disorder of the urea cycle. The evaluation yielded a plasma amino acid analysis consistent with OTC deficiency. However, genetic analysis did not reveal a somatic mutation of the OTC gene in this patient. The hyperammonemic encephalopathy was reversed by the infusion of arginine, a common treatment for hereditary OTC deficiency. This case may represent a distinct syndrome of reversible hyperammonemia in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.
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PMID:Postchemotherapy hyperammonemic encephalopathy emulating ornithine transcarbamoylase (OTC) deficiency. 1841 62

A 63-year-old man with liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma presented with abrupt encephalopathy with markedly elevated blood ammonia levels. He was found lying down in front of the hospital 2 days after treatment of right hypochondrial pain with sustained-release oral morphine sulfate. He tended to be constipated before receiving morphine sulfate. The excess production of ammonia due to his constitutional constipation exacerbated by the use of oral morphine was thought to be the causal association with transient hepatic encephalopathy. He regained consciousness by receiving aminoleban intravenously and anticonstipating suppository. We realized that much care should be taken to avoid such opioid-related constipation at the time of pain management for quality of life improvement in patients with cancer pain.
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PMID:[A case of hepatic encephalopathy induced by adverse effect of morphine sulfate]. 1863 39

Cirrhosis represents the end stage of any chronic liver disease. Hepatitis C and alcohol are currently the main causes of cirrhosis in the United States. Although initially cirrhosis is compensated, it eventually becomes decompensated, as defined by the presence of ascites, variceal hemorrhage, encephalopathy, and/or jaundice. These management recommendations are divided according to the status, compensated or decompensated, of the cirrhotic patient, with a separate section for the screening, diagnosis, and management of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), as this applies to patients with both compensated and decompensated cirrhosis. In the compensated patient, the main objective is to prevent variceal hemorrhage and any practice that could lead to decompensation. In the decompensated patient, acute variceal hemorrhage and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis are severe complications that require hospitalization. Hepatorenal syndrome is also a severe complication of cirrhosis but one that usually occurs in patients who are already in the hospital and, as it represents an extreme of the hemodynamic alterations that lead to ascites formation, it is placed under treatment of ascites. Recent advances in the pathophysiology of the complications of cirrhosis have allowed for a more rational management of cirrhosis and also for the stratification of patients into different risk groups that require different management. These recommendations are based on evidence in the literature, mainly from randomized clinical trials and meta-analyses of these trials. When few or no data exist from well-designed prospective trials, emphasis is given to results from large series and consensus conferences with involvement of recognized experts. A rational management of cirrhosis will result in improvements in quality of life, treatment adherence, and, ultimately, in outcomes.
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PMID:Management and treatment of patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension: recommendations from the Department of Veterans Affairs Hepatitis C Resource Center Program and the National Hepatitis C Program. 2013 82

Fibrolamellar carcinoma (FLC) is a rare malignant hepatocellular tumor of unknown etiology, arising almost exclusively from noninfected, noncirrhotic liver of young adults. FLC has traditionally been considered to have better survival than hepatocellular carcinoma; however, this notion might be highly erroneous. Patients with metastatic disease at presentation have a dismal prognosis with 5-year survival of only 15%. We describe a case of highly aggressive metastatic FLC that presented as hyperammonemic encephalopathy, which has never been previously reported in the literature.
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PMID:Hyperammonemic encephalopathy: a rare presentation of fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma. 2001 Jan 60


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