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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Primary tumors of the liver infrequently develop in patients with a normal liver or in those who have not been exposed to one of several tumor-producing compounds. Hepatocellular adenoma was one of the rarest liver tumors prior to the use of oral contraceptives (OCs). Now the annual incidence in longterm users is estimated at 3-4/100,000. An adenoma that follows OC use is one that often regresses with discontinuation. Focal nodular hyperplasia is a nonencapsulated solitary lesion that has a fibrotic stellate center in which large thick-walled arteries are the source of the blood supply, and occurs most often in women during the menstrual age, and there is no evidence that OCs have increased their frequency. Adenomatous hyperplasia occurs occasionally in patients with submassive necrosis and also in those with cirrhosis. Liver cysts present most often in middle aged women and the ratio of females to males is 4:1. In the US, metastatic carcinoma of the liver is some 18-20 times more frequent and about 85% of these arise in a cirrhotic or precirrhotic liver. Malignant mesenchymal tumors have been associated with exposure to vinyl chloride of injection of Thorotrast. Signs and symptoms of
liver disease
occur in about 50% of patients with hepatic metastases with
hepatomegaly
being the most common physical sign. Metastatic carcinoma most often produces multiple umbilicated nodules that involve the liver uniformly. Portal hypertension may be associated with a hepatic neoplasm.
...
PMID:Tumors of the liver: pathologic features. 630 41
Liver examination performed in seven patients who had renal failure related to light chain deposits demonstrated in all cases the presence of liver light chain deposits. In all of our patients clinical renal involvement antedated the
liver disease
. The portal areas and the Disse spaces contained a granular material which strongly reacted with antilight chain antiserum (kappa or gamma). In one patient in whom lesions were severe, the sinusoid edge was ruptured and a pelliosis -like lesion was observed. In the five patients who were hemodialyzed for more than several months at the time of discovery of liver deposits, increased amounts of collagen were present in the Disse spaces, and one patient had extensive liver fibrosis by light microscopy. Clinical liver involvement was defined by moderate
hepatomegaly
in five patients, with ascites in two. A slight increase in phosphatase alkaline activity was frequently observed and bromsulphalein retention was present in two. In one patient liver tests remained entirely normal despite the presence of diffuse kappa light chain deposits.
...
PMID:Liver involvement in nonamyloid light chain deposits disease. 642 20
Hepatic tuberculosis was confirmed in 96 patients presenting with the features of
liver disease
, only 14 of whom had other concomitant hepatic pathology. Although respiratory symptoms occurred in 74 per cent of cases, these were overshadowed by the abdominal manifestations. The latter most frequently included right hypochondrial pain, abdominal distension, firm tender
hepatomegaly
, splenomegaly and ascites. Icterus was observed in 11 cases (only one of whom had concurrent hepatic pathology) and liver failure was found in 10 patients. A surgical presentation occurred in three patients. Four of 15 patients with pancytopenia were noted to have hypersplenism. Abnormalities in coagulation were noted in 26 patients (24 with low prothrombin index and two with moderately raised fibrinogen degradation products). The characteristic serum profile included hyponatraemia (64 per cent of cases), raised alkaline phosphatase (83 per cent) and gamma glutamyl transferase (77 per cent), hypoalbuminaemia (63 per cent) and hypergammaglobulinaemia (83 per cent). Transaminase levels were moderately elevated in 78 per cent of cases. Hepatic imaging techniques were frequently misleading. Chest radiographs aided the diagnosis but were normal in 25 per cent of cases. Histologically, acid fast bacilli, caseation and granulomas were seen in 9, 83 and 96 per cent of cases respectively. Adverse prognostic features included age (below 20 years), miliary TB, coagulation defects and the presence of predisposing factors; these were of value in selecting appropriate therapy. The overall mortality was 42 per cent. Liver biopsy was the most useful aid to correct diagnosis which was suspected clinically in only 47 per cent of cases.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis hepatitis: a clinical review of 96 cases. 651 2
The authors describe a case of hepatic hemangiomathosis in a three months old infant with a clinical picture of multiple cutaneous hemangioma, epatomegaly and severe cardiac failure. The cardiac catheterization with selective angiography showed extensive communication between the mammary artery and the hepatic circulation with the presence of large bloody areas into the markedly
enlarged liver
. The medical treatment with digitalis, diuretics, and corticosteroids obtained rapid resolution of the cardiac failure and of the A-V fistula signs. A clinical picture of severe liver cholostatic disease developed few months later which was confirmed by histological examination. The subsequent course has been favorable with complete clinical resolution of the
liver disease
.
...
PMID:[Hepatic hemangiomatosis with congestive cardiac failure and development into a cholostatic hepatopathy]. 653 23
A study of 510 patients in Scotland and northeastern England with histological evidence of alcohol-induced
liver disease
showed no difference in the age of presentation between males and females. Single men and widowed females were particularly susceptible to alcoholic
liver disease
. The social class distribution was similar to the population in general. Women were more reluctant to volunteer a history of alcoholism than men, they had a higher incidence of previous psychiatric illness (usually due to alcohol abuse) and they developed
liver disease
at lower consumption thresholds of alcohol than men. Patients under 40 years of age were more likely to have alcoholic fatty liver and less likely to have active cirrhosis than those over 40. Most often, the presenting symptoms were non-specific and tended to be related to the gastrointestinal system, particularly in women. Five per cent of patients were asymptomatic and 14% came to hospital for conditions other than alcoholic
liver disease
. Important clues to asymptomatic alcoholic
liver disease
included
hepatomegaly
, clubbing of the fingers and abnormal liver function tests. Gastro-oesophageal varices accounted for 40% of instances of haemorrhage and the mortality from upper gastrointestinal bleeding was 17%. Anaemia was the most common haematological abnormality. Alcoholic hepatitis was observed more frequently in the Glasgow area then elsewhere.
...
PMID:Alcoholic liver disease in Scotland and northeastern England: presenting features in 510 patients. 660 94
Liver disease
related to alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency occurs only in Pi ZZ homozygous children. Eleven per cent of Pi ZZ infants present with prolonged neonatal cholestasis. In our group, 25 of 45 Pi ZZ infants with prolonged neonatal cholestasis presented with later cirrhosis. Persistence of jaundice beyond the sixth month of age, early development of splenomegaly, persistence of hard
hepatomegaly
and liver function abnormalities, and early portal fibrosis have a poor prognostic significance. The most severe course occurs in infants with an early histologic pattern of paucity of interlobular bile ducts. Portal hypertension was present in 19 of 25 children presenting with cirrhosis; 8 of 25 Pi ZZ children with cirrhosis died during childhood. Long-term protein-restricted diet and portal systemic shunts were helpful in treatment of four Pi ZZ children with cirrhosis; however, the long-term course in Pi ZZ children with cirrhosis is unpredictable.
...
PMID:alpha-1-Antitrypsin deficiency. 660 4
The authors report 15 cases of nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) of the liver observed in 10 women and 5 men during a 9 year period. Gastrointestinal bleeding due to ruptured esophageal varices revealed the
liver disease
in 11 cases.
Hepatomegaly
and splenomegaly were noted in 9 cases and ascites in 7. Anicteric cholestasis was demonstrated in 10 cases. Another disease, e. g. myelofibrosis and monoclonal gammapathy, was present in 11 patients. In 10 patients, portal diversion was performed; outcome being favorable with a follow-up of one to six years. The analysis of these cases and of the 113 previously published reports calls for the following comments: 1) In most cases, NRH is characterized by small-sized hepatocytic nodules scattered throughout the entire liver with no surrounding fibrosis; however this histological pattern may vary somewhat, with adjacent normal zones being found adjacent to typical cirrhotic fibrosis; although a precise morphometric study was not performed in our patients, obstruction of the tiny branches of intrahepatic portal veins was not observed. 2) Histological diagnosis of NRH is difficult and in most cases requires surgical biopsy specimens and specific coloration of the reticulin network. 3) NRH must be considered as a new cause of intrahepatic (sinusoidal or presinusoidal) portal hypertension and/or of chronic anicteric cholestasis. 4) A number of various conditions may be associated with NRH, the most frequent being Felty's syndrome and myeloproliferative disorders. 5) The pathogenesis of NRH remains unknown. 6) Portal diversion generally has a favorable outcome in this disease.
...
PMID:[Nodular regenerative hyperplasia of the liver. Study of 15 cases and review of the literature]. 662 10
It has been shown that alcohol consumption disrupts liver microtubules, impairs protein secretion and leads to ballooning of the hepatocytes in rats. Ethanol-induced
hepatomegaly
was accounted for by an increase of the hepatocytes volume. To study whether these changes occur in human alcoholic
liver disease
, hepatic tubular protein and export protein content were measured in 29 cases of alcoholic
liver disease
and were compared with those of 37 cases of non-alcoholic
liver disease
and 5 cases of non-hepatobiliary disease. Hepatic polymerized tubulin was significantly decreased in alcoholic
liver disease
compared to non-alcoholic
liver disease
(p less than 0.01), while free tubulin was increased in alcoholic
liver disease
. Hepatic transferrin (one of the export proteins) content was significantly higher (p less than 0.01) and serum transferrin level was significantly lower (p less than 0.05) in alcoholic
liver disease
than in non-alcoholic
liver disease
. These findings indicated that even in humans, chronic alcohol consumption decreased hepatic microtubules by impairing polymerization of tubular protein and increased hepatic export protein content. This decrease in hepatic microtubules by chronic alcohol consumption may play an important role in the development of human alcoholic
liver disease
.
...
PMID:Changes of hepatic microtubules and secretory proteins in human alcoholic liver disease. 663 57
The light- and electron-microscopic changes in a biopsy of the liver obtained at age 17 mo from a child with fetal alcohol syndrome were studied. At the time of biopsy,
hepatomegaly
and raised serum transaminases were present as well as neurologic and growth defects and the typical facial anomalies seen in this syndrome. Light microscopy of the liver biopsy specimen revealed parenchymal fat with portal and perisinusoidal fibrosis. Ultrastructurally, perisinusoidal spaces contained deposits of intermediate-size and large collagen fibers, myofibroblasts and occasional Ito cells, and subendothelial basement membrane-like material. These changes resemble those seen in adult human and baboon alcoholic
liver disease
and suggest that hepatic fibrosis in fetal alcohol syndrome has a similar pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Hepatic fibrosis in fetal alcohol syndrome. Pathologic similarities to adult alcoholic liver disease. 668 69
A newly recognized clinical and morphologic pattern of acute alcoholic
liver disease
is described. Twenty-one patients, having the hepatic morphologic features of alcoholic foamy degeneration, were retrospectively analyzed. All patients had a significant history of chronic alcoholism. Jaundice and
hepatomegaly
were usually present. Hepatic encephalopathy, ascites, bleeding esophageal varices, or functional renal failure occurred in less than 10%. Usually this was the first episode of decompensation. Laboratory studies revealed a pattern of very transiently marked elevation of serum aminotransferase and more prolonged elevation of alkaline phosphatase activity and bilirubin levels. In the majority of cases, leukocytosis was absent, and serum cholesterol was elevated. The laboratory profile differed significantly from that of acute sclerosing hyaline necrosis. Serologic markers of acute viral hepatitis A and B were absent. Needle biopsy specimens of the liver revealed intact lobular architecture except for 1 case of cirrhosis. The perivenular hepatocytes revealed foamy fatty change characterized by striking cell swelling with massive accumulation of microvesicular fat, bile pigment deposition in the cytoplasm, and no displacement of the nucleus to the periphery of the cell. Megamitochondria were frequently identified. Multiple foci of hepatocyte dropout without significant parenchymal neutrophilic exudation and delicate intrasinusoidal collagen fibers were present in the perivenular area. Macrovesicular fatty change coexisted to a variable degree. The affected hepatocytes had extensive disorganization of the organelles by electron microscopy and decreased or absent functional activity by enzyme histochemical staining. These changes appear to be a purely degenerative process without inflammatory reaction. All patients in the present series showed a rapid recovery upon abstaining from alcohol.
...
PMID:Alcoholic foamy degeneration--a pattern of acute alcoholic injury of the liver. 682 80
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