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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have carried out a prospective survey of 28 primary liver carcinomas over one year. Hepatocellular carcinoma is the commonest malignancy seen in Rhodesian blacks, which results in a high index of suspicion and accounts for the 96.4% positive diagnosis before death in this study. The age distribution was evenly spread through adult life with no definite peak incidence. Some were young and without evidence of
chronic liver disease
, but many had the stigmata of established hepatic disease. This contrasts with the common assertion that in areas of high incidence for primary liver cancer those affected are mainly young and lack signs of
chronic liver disease
. The commonest presenting symptoms were abdominal pain and swelling and weight loss.
Hepatomegaly
, often tender and nodular, was present in all but one. The incidence of alpha-feto protein, 46.5%, is low compared with other countries where primary liver cancer is common. Hepatitis B antigen was absent in all 28, suggesting that there is no association between the persistence of the antigen and hepatocellular carcinoma in Rhodesia. Liver function tests, although abnormal, were never diagnostic of primary liver cancer. We have confirmed the association of high alcohol consumption and cirrhosis with hepatocellular carcinoma.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in the Rhodesian African. 6 99
Portal hypertension and variceal hemorrhage may be found in the renal transplant patient with
chronic liver disease
. The development of portal hypertension was found to occur after long-term graft survival without significant rejection. The development of positive cytomegalic virus and negative hepatitis-associated antigen appeared to be common. Splenomegaly and prominent venous collateral were the most frequent physical findings, while ascites and
hepatomegaly
were less frequent. Portasystemic decompression can be performed successfully, however, the mortality and morbidity appear to be higher for this group than for other cirrhotic patients with comparable hepatic reserve.
...
PMID:Portal hypertension following renal transplantation. 35 15
Four cases of hepatic angiosarcoma are reported with a review of 99 other cases in the English literature. Angiosarcoma of the liver is associated with chronic exposure to thorotrast, vinyl chloride, arsenicals, radium and possibly copper and with chronic idiopathic hemochromatosis. Although 40% of patients have hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis at autopsy, the nature of the association between
chronic liver disease
and hepatic angiosarcoma is unknown. The clinical presentation of hepatic angiosarcoma is nonspecific with abdominal pain, weakness and weight loss common complaints and with
hepatomegaly
, ascites and jaundice common findings. Liver function tests are usually abnormal but there is no one liver function test or set of tests specific for the tumor. The occurrence of thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation is characteristic of hepatic angiosarcoma and may be related to local consumption of clotting factors and formed blood elements in the tumor. Catastrophic intraabdominal bleeding is also characteristic and occurs in one-fourth of all cases. This complication is likely related to the high incidence of clotting abnormalities and the vascular nature of the neoplasm. Selective hepatic arteriogram and open liver biopsy are the foundations of diagnostic evaluation. Percutaneous liver biopsy should be avoided. Failure to appreciate the possibility of hepatic angiosarcoma in the proper clinical setting, leading to blind percutaneous biopsy, may result in failure to make the diagnosis at the cost of significant morbidity and mortality. Survival of patients with hepatic angiosarcoma is brief; only 3% live longer than 2 years. Treatment of the tumor to date is empirical. There are probably a few patients who might benefit from radical surgery with curative intent. For all others chemotherapy is indicated. Adriamycin is active against hepatic angiosarcoma, but optimal dose and mode of administration require further investigation. Further study is also required to delineate the cause of hepatic angiosarcoma in the 60% of cases without definite epidemiologic association.
...
PMID:The clinical features of hepatic angiosarcoma: a report of four cases and a review of the English literature. 36 8
The prevalence of hepatitis C infection and possible predisposing factors was assessed in a renal unit. Of 343 patients at our renal dialysis centre, 37 (10.8%) were anti-HCV positive by a 1st-generation assay (ELISA, Ortho/Chiron) and confirmed positive in 35 (10.2%) with a 2nd-generation test (UBI, New York). Anti-HCV positivity was significantly associated with: duration of renal replacement therapy (P < 0.0001); quantity of blood transfused (P < 0.002); duration of hospital haemodialysis (P = 0.0001); duration with a functional renal transplant (P = 0.039); and aspartate aminotransferase (P < 0.0001). Logistic regression determined the following variables to be independent risk factors: duration of renal replacement therapy with a relative risk of 34.3 for 5-9 years and 87.4 when the duration was in excess of 10 years; renal transplant for less than 1 year (relative risk of 5.0); transfusion in excess of 50 units of blood (relative risk of 11.6). Clinical assessment of anti-HCV-positive patients revealed peripheral signs of
chronic liver disease
in 40%,
hepatomegaly
in 34%, and splenomegaly in 9%. This prevalence of hepatitis C infection is similar to other European and North American centres, but contrasts with low prevalence rates reported from dialysis populations in the UK. It adds further support for routine screening of blood and possibly organ donors and implementation of further infection control measures in dialysis centres.
...
PMID:Prevalence of antibodies to hepatitis C in dialysis patients and transplant recipients with possible routes of transmission. 827 37
The laparoscopic and pathological diagnoses of 43 patients who underwent abdominal laparoscopy for various indications are presented. Major indications for the laparoscopy included
hepatomegaly
in 32 patients, ascites in 28, and pyrexia of unknown origin (PUO) in 18 patients. A combination of two or more of these indications was a more common feature. The most frequently encountered laparoscopic diagnoses were tuberculosis and
chronic liver disease
(16 patients each), followed by cancer (9 patients). However, on pathological examination of peritoneal or liver biopsy tissue and on follow-up, tuberculosis was confirmed in 12 patients,
chronic liver disease
in 14 patients and hepatocellular carcinoma in 11 patients. No complications were encountered during the laparoscopy. Our findings indicate that abdominal laparoscopy is a safe, quick and inexpensive diagnostic tool, particularly when appropriate and adequate tissue is taken for pathological examination. In such instances, laparoscopy would save an unnecessary laparotomy, especially where tuberculosis and cancer are considered in the differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Tuberculous peritonitis: the value of laparoscopy. 166 76
An attempt was made to estimate noninvasively portal pressure (PP) in patients with
chronic liver disease
, using the theory of quantification, a kind of multivariate analysis. Forty-one patients with liver cirrhosis and 22 patients with chronic hepatitis in whom hepatic venous catheterization had been performed were studied. Seventeen parameters (age, sex, mean blood pressure, red blood cell count, platelet count, prothrombin time, lactate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, total bilirubin, albumin, gamma-globulin, indocyanine green retention at 15 min, blood urea nitrogen,
hepatomegaly
, splenomegaly, ascites and edema) were selected for the estimation of PP. The estimated PP correlated significantly with the data obtained by hepatic venous catheterization with a high correlation coefficient of 0.835 (p less than 0.01). An investigation using the theory of quantification was also undertaken to determine which of the 17 parameters selected above was most useful in estimating PP. Among the 17 parameters indocyanine green retention at 15 min, red blood cell count, prothrombin time,
hepatomegaly
and splenomegaly seemed to contribute significantly to the estimation of PP. When the formula was applied to 31 successive patients with
chronic liver disease
(external samples), the correlation between the estimated and measured PP was 0.455 (p less than 0.01). These results indicate that the formula is clinically useful in estimating PP in patients with
chronic liver disease
.
...
PMID:[Estimation of portal pressure using the theory of quantification]. 201 41
An extremely benign variant of cholesterol ester storage disease (CESD) was diagnosed in two female patients aged 43 and 56 years. In one of them the course was entirely subclinical until a stroke at the age of 47, most probably a complication of secondary hyperlipoproteinaemia. The diagnosis was made accidentally in vivo during extensive examination for concomitant monoclonal gammapathy. The other patient (aged 56), still displays a fairly stable course with minor dyspeptic symptoms. The clinical findings in both patients were confined to moderate well tolerated
hepatomegaly
, hyperlipoproteinaemia of IIb type and xanthelasmata. Acid lipase activity was markedly deficient in peripheral leukocytes and cultured fibroblasts. These cases represent a rare adult variant the existence of which should be borne in mind in the differential diagnosis of
chronic liver disease
in advanced age and of hyperlipoproteinaemic states. The diagnostic criteria for the routine clinicopathological steps are summarized with emphasis on a special lipopigment deposition pattern, encompassing inhibition and modification of lipofuscin generation in hepatocytes and an excess of ceroid production in both portal and intralobular histiocytes. The varied ultrastructural appearance of the lysosomal limiting membrane complex is described.
...
PMID:Subclinical course of cholesterol ester storage disease (CESD) diagnosed in adulthood. Report on two cases with remarks on the nature of the liver storage process. 210 53
Severe cachexia of extremely rapid onset typifies the young Black African patient with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In order to assess whether this is a consequence of tumor-associated increases in protein metabolism or simply due to inadequate dietary intake, the following study was undertaken. The technique of constant i.v. infusion of 14C-labeled leucine was used to measure whole body protein flux, breakdown, synthesis, and oxidation rates in 8 adults with HCC, 4 patients with massive
hepatomegaly
due to metastatic adenocarcinoma from bowel, 6 patients with
chronic liver disease
, and 10 controls. Endogenous protein breakdown and oxidation were similar between patients with
chronic liver disease
(breakdown, 4.4 +/- 1.2 g/kg/day; oxidation, 0.8 +/- 0.4 g/kg/day) and controls but were significantly (P less than 0.002) higher in patients with liver tumors, the highest rates being observed in those with HCC (breakdown, 8.5 +/- 4.3 g/kg/day; oxidation, 1.4 +/- 0.5 g/kg/day). Protein turnover was generally higher in the HCC group, with increased rates of reincorporation of amino acids into protein synthesis (P less than 0.05). In one HCC patient a synchronized diagnostic liver biopsy demonstrated high fractional synthesis of rates of HCC proteins of 86%/day. In addition, the incorporation rates of labeled amino acid into fibrinogen, immunoglobulin G, and transferrin were also highest (P less than 0.03) in HCC patients. In order to assess the relative importance of diet in weight loss, dietary intake levels were assessed from hospital records of HCC patients and by dietary recall during the week prior to study. Intakes ranged from 30 to 70% of calculated requirement levels. In conclusion, our results suggest that the rapid wasting seen in patients with HCC is due to an imbalance between the metabolic demands, which can be elevated in some patients, and inadequate dietary replenishment.
...
PMID:Contribution of elevated protein turnover and anorexia to cachexia in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. 215 53
Although rather uncommon and multifactorial in etiology, liver cirrhosis is a severe and often rapidly fatal disease in pediatrics. In our institution, during the last 15 years, 22 children with liver cirrhosis have been followed. The underlying predisposing condition was HBV infection (8 cases), CMV perinatal infection (2 cases), Wilson's disease (4 cases), chronic cholestasis (2 cases) and alcohol abuse (2 cases); in 4 cases no predisposing condition was evident. In all cases the histological examination of the liver was the diagnostic cornerstone. The mean age at diagnosis was 6 years and 8 months, with an early onset especially in the posthepatitis cirrhosis. In 10 out of 22 patients, cirrhosis was not preceded by an history of
chronic liver disease
. Poor subjective symptomatology was present in 13 of the cases,
hepatomegaly
in all, splenomegaly in 18 cases, signs of hepatic failure in 13 cases. In all patients various impairments of hepatocellular synthesis were detectable, especially during the period preceding the development of hepatic insufficiency. The mean time to cirrhosis was 5 years. The average duration of the follow up was 3 years and 4 months: during the follow up 6 patients improved, 5 patients showed no clinical or functional modifications of their hepatic disease, 3 patients worsened and 8 died. In order to perform suitable treatment of liver cirrhosis the need of early diagnosis and etiological definition should be emphasized.
...
PMID:[Liver cirrhosis in childhood. Considerations on 22 cases with different etiology]. 217 33
Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) or chronic non-suppurative destructive cholangiohepatitis is rare in southern Africa. Eight patients with this diagnosis were identified and fully investigated at Groote Schuur Hospital between 1980 and 1988. Seven patients were female, all were white or coloured, and their ages ranged from 49 years to 80 years. All patients presented with a history of malaise, fatigue, night sweats and pruritus, which had been present for 3 months--12 years before diagnosis of PBC. Initial misdiagnosis had resulted in unnecessary invasive investigations including laparotomies. Signs of
chronic liver disease
, such as xantholasmas, evidence of pruritus, the sicca syndrome or
hepatomegaly
, were invariably present. Marked elevation of serum alkaline phosphatase level and IgM were present in all cases. Antimitochondrial antibodies were positive in significant titre in 7 of the 8 patients. Liver biopsies demonstrated stage II-III disease in all patients. Therapy was chiefly supportive and symptomatic although most patients received immunosuppressive agents. Despite the late presentation, the subsequent course was similar to that seen elsewhere where patients are recognised earlier.
...
PMID:Primary biliary cirrhosis. A retrospective survey at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town. 236 77
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