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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (hepatosplenomegaly)
4,408 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A two and a half-year old child is described who presented with signs of portal hypertension (hematemesis, hepatosplenomegaly, ascites). Her subsequent work-up revealed that the "pressure-head" originated within the pulmonary arterial bed. Indeed, severe changes of primary pulmonary hypertension were found at autopsy. What is unique about this case is the absence of cardiopulmonary symptoms prior to the development of suprahepatic portal hypertension. In addition, the pulmonary disease developed in the absence of underlying chronic hepatic disease or extrahepatic portal vein thrombosis which, reportedly, can lead to pulmonary hypertension.
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PMID:Primary pulmonary hypertension presenting as portal hypertension. 45 36

Regencrative nodular hyperplasia (RHN) is a rare condition, the diagnosis of which is based upon histological findings. It is seen in Felty's syndrome with portal hypertension (PHT), as was the case in the patient reported here. This was a 72-year-old man, with long standing rheumatoid arthritis, hepatosplenomegaly, a neutrophil leucopaenia and oesophageal varices responsible for recurrent haematemeses. Despite a portocaval anastomosis, the patient died from postoperative acute hepatic failure. Histological study revealed changes in the hepatocytes and the reticulin system typical of RNH without cirrhosis. The relationship between Felty's syndrome and RHN, as well as the mechanism of the hypertension, are discussed in the light of cases from the literature.
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PMID:[Anatomo-clinical study of a case of regenerative nodular hyperplasia of the liver with Felty's syndrome and portal hypertension]. 54 55

A boy, aged aged 11, developed sucessively splenomegaly, portal hypertension with hepatic fibrosis and finally pulmonary arteriovenous shunts which were responsible for chronic hypoxia. The authors discuss the classification of syndromes with hepatosplenomegaly that cause Banti's syndrome, and the pathogenesis of multiple pulmonary arterio-venous fistulae in certain liver diseases. The existence of multifocal abdominal, pulmonary and cutaneous vascular malformations suggests that there may be a diffuse vascular abnormality.
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PMID:[Banti's syndrome complicating angiomatosis]. 66 27

The Budd-Chiari syndrome caused by occlusion of the major hepatic veins, often of unknown etiology, is typically characterized by massive ascites, hepatomegaly and abdominal pain due to intense congestion of the liver. The outcome has almost always been fatal. This report describes an evaluation of side-to-side portacaval shunt in dogs with experimental Budd-Chiari syndrome and in six patients with hepatic vein thrombosis. In the animal studies, side-to-side portacaval shunt was very effective in relieving massive ascites, hepatomegaly, hepatic congestion and portal hypertension produced by ligation of the hepatic veins. Only one of 24 dogs with side-to-side anastomosis reformed ascites, 67% of the animals survived until the study was concluded after one year, and liver biopsies showed reversal of the severe pathologic abnormalities. In contrast, all 20 control dogs subjected to a sham laparotomy, and all 20 dogs that underwent end-to-side portacaval shunt reformed massive ascites and died within six months with continued hepatic congestion and necrosis. All six patients with the Budd-Chiari syndrome due to hepatic vein occlusion had massive ascites (4.4-15.9 l), hepatomegaly, abdominal pain and disturbed liver function. In all six, angiography demonstrated occlusion of the hepatic veins with a patent inferior vena cava (IVC) and a normal IVC pressure, and liver biopsy showed intense centrilobular congestion and necrosis. The most valuable diagnostic study was angiography of the IVC and hepatic veins with pressure measurements. Side-to-side portacaval shunt was performed from four to 14 weeks after the onset of symptoms, and produced dramatic and sustained relief of ascites in five of the six patients during follow-up periods of from eight months to seven years. Liver function returned to normal, hepatosplenomegaly disappeared, none of the survivors developed portal-systemic encephalopathy, and follow-up liver biopsies showed disappearance of congestion and necrosis, but mild to moderate fibrosis. One patient died following an emergency IVC thrombectomy and portacaval shunt, which was undertaken when, during the course of his workup, his condition deteriorated suddenly because the thrombotic process extended from the hepatic veins into the IVC. The everpresent risk of this complication, and the dangers associated with delaying operation were emphasized by this case. It is concluded that side-to-side portacaval shunt, which decompresses the liver by converting the portal vein into an outflow tract, provides effective treatment of the Budd-Chiari syndrome when the occlusive process is confined to the hepatic veins.
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PMID:Treatment of Budd-Chiari syndrome by side-to-side portacaval shunt: experimental and clinical results. 69 34

A patient who developed pancytopenia and hepatosplenomegaly with portal hypertension is described. Liver wedge biopsy at the time of operation showed typical histology of congenital hepatic fibrosis. Renal surgical biopsy revealed tubular ectasia. A continuous anastomosing network of the biliary tree was observed by reconstruction of serial sections of the liver. Some parts of the network were dilated and no isolated bile ducts were present.
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PMID:Congenital hepatic fibrosis. A case report with study of three dimensional reconstruction of serial sections of the liver. 73 25

Histiocytosis X describes a disease characterized by histiocytic infiltration of the reticuloendothelial system, skin, bones, and pituitary gland. The disseminated form frequently occurs in infants and children. Chemotherapy has significantly improved the prognosis in this disorder. Sixty-three per cent of survivors, however, have some residual disability related to fibrosis of tissues previously infiltrated by histiocytes. In instances of liver involvement, healing by fibrosis may result in cirrhosis with portal hypertension and bleeding esophageal varices. Clinical findings include hepatosplenomegaly, jaundice, ascites, hypoalbuminemia, prolonged prothrombin time, and Bromsulphalein retention. Histologic examination of the liver shows a characteristic dense "macronodular" periportal cirrhotic pattern. Three children with portal hypertension and bleeding varices due to healed histiocytosis X were sucessfully managed by portosystemic shunt procedures. Portacaval, mesocaval, and central splenorenal shunts were equally effective in relieving poral hypertension. These children had neither recurrence of bleeding nor evidence of encephalopathy. Two children remain well whereas in one patient a primary hepatoma developed fourteen years posthung and he died of pulmonary metastases. Portosystemic shunt procedures effectively relieve the threat of potentially fatal variceal hemorrhage and improve the opportunity for long-term survival in children with cirrhosis and portal hypertension due to healed histiocytosis X.
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PMID:Portal hypertension in infants and children with histiocytosis X. 108 50

Although Schistosoma japonicum egg granulomas are generally considered to be similar to those of S. mansoni (which are largely immunologic reactions of the delayed hypersensitivity type) there are suggestions that the histopathology and perhaps the etiology of the lesions are different. In mice with light S. japonicum infections, at 5 weeks after infection (2 weeks after egg production began), the livers contained 36,000 eggs each, but there was no reaction to the eggs, nor any evidence of hepatosplenic disease. By 6 weeks, large abscesses replete with cosinophils occurred around some of the eggs, and there was periportal inflammation consisting predominantly of plasma cells. From this time on, major lesions occurred mainly around large aggregates of eggs, and there was hepatosplenomegaly and portal hypertension. Living S. japonicum eggs injected into the pulmonary microvasculature of mice did not evoke significant granulomatous reactions on either primary or secondary exposure. Even when the eggs were injected into the lungs of infected animals, which had large granulomas around egg aggregates in the liver, little or no inflammatory reaction was seen around the eggs distributed singly throughout the pulmonary vessels. When the priming dose of eggs or soluble egg antigens was injected subcutaneously with or without complete Freund's adjuvant, significant granuloma formation occurred around eggs subsequently injected into the lungs. On the basis, therefore, of differences in the parasite factor (eggs) and host factors (histopathology and responses to routes of injection) it is suggested that the immunologic factors responsible for granuloma formation around S. mansoni and S. japonicum eggs may differ significantly.
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PMID:The Schistosoma japonicum egg granuloma. 116 31

HSS represents a special model of intrahepatic portal hypertension characterized by a presinusoidal portal block and a well-preserved liver parenchyma. Symmers' fibrosis appears in a small but significant proportion of patients with a high worm load. Its pathogenesis is not well established, although experimental and clinical studies point to egg granulomata as the main pathogenetic factor. The eggs carried continuously through the portal circulation produce inflammation and gross amputation of the intrahepatic veins, portal and periportal granulomas, and, eventually, a coarse perilobular fibrosis ("pipe-stem"). Portal hypertension, esophageal varices, and hepatosplenomegaly are the main consequences of these morphologic changes. Gastrointestinal bleeding is the most frequent cause of death. Unlike in cirrhosis, advanced liver failure is not seen except when HSS is associated with liver lesions from other causes such as virus and alcoholism. Helminthiasis treatment is based on chemotherapy with praziquantel or oxamniquine. Bleeding esophageal varices are managed by sclerotherapy or surgical procedures. Splenectomy with gastroesophageal devascularization seems to be the best choice.
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PMID:Hepatosplenic schistosomiasis. Pathophysiology and treatment. 156 71

This study concerns Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) caused by occlusion of the subdiaphragmatic inferior vena cava (IVC). It describes the experimental and clinical evaluation of the treatment of this disorder by one-stage combined portal and vena caval decompression with a direct side-to-side portacaval shunt (PCS) and a caval-atrial shunt (CAS) graft. BCS was produced in rats by gradual occlusion of the suprahepatic IVC with an ameroid constrictor. When ascites and portal hypertension were established, 12 control rats survived a sham thoracolaparotomy, 16 rats survived a mesoatrial shunt, and 16 rats survived combined PCS and CAS graft. All control rats re-formed ascites and died within 2 months. Nine of 16 rats with mesoatrial shunt developed graft thrombosis, re-formed ascites, and died within 2 months. In contrast, only 2 of 16 rats that underwent combined PCS and CAS developed graft thrombosis, re-formed ascites, and died. Liver biopsies showed reversal of severe pathologic changes in rats with patent grafts. Clinical evaluation of combined PCS and CAS using a 20-mm ring-reinforced Gore-Tex graft has been undertaken in five patients with BCS and ascites, hepatosplenomegaly, intense hepatic congestion on biopsy, and angiography showing occlusion of both the IVC and hepatic veins. All five patients are alive and well 6 months to 7.5 years postoperatively with patent grafts, no ascites or need for diuretics, no encephalopathy, normal liver function, and reversal of liver pathology. It is concluded that combined PCS and CAS create a high-flow shunt that decompresses both the portal system and IVC, has a low incidence of graft thrombosis, has been consistently effective in relieving BCS caused by IVC occlusion, and appears to be superior to mesoatrial shunt.
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PMID:Treatment of Budd-Chiari syndrome due to inferior vena cava occlusion by combined portal and vena caval decompression. 173 62

Significant portion of the urologic and nephrologic patients in Yemen are treated because of the early and late complications of schistosomiasis (bilharsiasis). During two years 79 patients with renal insufficiency and complications have been examined and treated by the authors. In combination with moderate restricted renal functions hepatosplenomegaly and signs of portal hypertension were observed in female patients. Granulomatous infiltration, calcification and malignous tumour of the urinary bladder was found in men. Stricture of the ureter, uni- or bilateral consecutive hydronephrosis was detected frequently. In addition to inflammatory components bladder, ureteral and renal stones were verified. In the course of treatment 45 percutaneous nephrostomies were performed and an anterograde pyelography was carried out in 60 patients. Ureteral recanalisation was accomplished by means of an ureter stent in 8 cases. Because of serious uremia maintenance haemodialysis was performed in 52 patients. The aim of this work is to contribute to recognise the disease in early stage and emphasize the importance of establishing diagnosis as early as possible and stress the role of the appropriate causal and symptomatic treatment.
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PMID:[Late urinary tract complications of schistosomiasis]. 181 Dec 3


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