Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between March 1984 and February 1991, six orthotopic liver transplantations were performed at the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan. The indications for transplantation were Wilson's disease (5 patients) and biliary atresia (1 patient). Donors and recipients were matched only for size and ABO blood group compatibility, and the recipient operations were performed without the use of a venovenous bypass. Arterial reconstruction was carried out by end-to-end hepatic artery anastomosis (4), thoracic aortic conduit (1), or interposition of an iliac artery graft (1), whereas biliary reconstruction was accomplished by a choledochocholedochostomy using a T-tube stent (4) or a choledochocholedochostomy using an external cholecystostomy without stenting (2). Biliary complications occurred in three patients, and all required additional surgery. The average duration of donor-liver cold ischemia, operating time, and blood loss during surgery were 7 h and 50 min (range, 4.5-9 h), 13.5 h (range, 11.8-17 h), and 4,385 ml (range, 750-12,000 ml), respectively. The immunosuppressive regimens included a cyclosporin-steroid combination (n = 2) and a triple-drug combination (n = 4). All except one of the surviving patients experienced at least one rejection episode that was reversed by a methyl-prednisolone bolus and/or recycle. One patient developed a primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection that responded well to Ganciclovir treatment. Two of the patients died, one of injuries sustained in a traffic accident 3 years after transplantation, and the other of massive upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The overall survival value at 3 months was 83%, and the follow-up period ranged from 3 months to 7 years. All of the survivors have achieved complete rehabilitation and currently enjoy an excellent quality of life with normal liver function. Although the present study involved a small number of cases, our results indicate that liver transplantation can be successfully achieved in a high proportion of patients with acceptable morbidity, mortality, and cost in an Asian setting. The extreme shortage of donor organs is currently the most important obstacle limiting the application of liver transplantation in Taiwan.
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PMID:Liver transplantation in Taiwan: the Chang Gung experience. 145 66

Electroretinographic (ERG) investigations were performed in three AIDS patients. The first had cotton wool-like spots in both eyes (AIDS "retinopathy"). The second presented with the same changes in his right eye and an acute cytomegalovirus (CMV) in his left eye. In the third patient signs of healed peripheral retinochoroiditis were found. In CMV retinitis the retinal damage demonstrated by ERG correlated well with the ophthalmoscopic findings. As the ERG improved concurrently with Ganciclovir therapy, retinal function can be monitored by means of ERG controls. In the cases of AIDS "retinopathy" with only a few cotton wool-like spots and with healed peripheral retinochoroiditis, pronounced changes in the ERG were seen regularly; these were most probably caused by ischemia of the inner retinal layers.
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PMID:[Electroretinography in AIDS retinopathy and AIDS cytomegalovirus retinitis with ganciclovir therapy]. 283 55

Seronegative transplant recipients are at a high risk of developing primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection. The D+/R--constellation produces a 60%-80% probability of CMV disease. In such cases CMV prophylaxis is justified. Presentation of a 12-year old boy who developed a primary CMV infection following A combined liver-kidney transplantation; evaluation of prophylactic options and review of some difficulties in the diagnosis of CMV infection. A cadaveric liver-kidney transplantation (Tx) was done in a 12-year old boy with ESRD due to type I primary hyperoxaluria. CMV status: D+, R-; number of mismatches: 5. PRA 0; kidney cold ischemia time (CIT): 13.54 h; liver CIT: 10.10 h; immediate diuresis; Immunosuppression protocol: anti IL-2 receptor antibodies, steroids, mycophenolate mofetil (MMF); cyclosporine introduced on day 6. Over the first week, daily hemodialyses were done in order to remove oxalate deposits. Kidney and liver biopsies: no ACR, no oxalate deposits. CMV prophylaxis with ganciclovir started on day 0. Routine serology and PCR for CMV follow-up showed: pp 65, IgM and IgG, CMV. DNA (Murex CMV. DNA Hybrid Capture test 2.0): negative over the first 3 months. Day 98: CMV pp 65 positive, IgM neg, DNA neg. Day 108: pp 65 neg, IgM positive, IgG neg. CMV. DNA positive (15 x 105 copies/ml). Clinical status: except for mild Cushing, liver tests and kidney function were normal. Ganciclovir was administered intravenously (i.v.) and after 14 days continued perorally. A few days later, leukopenia with severe neutropenia (neutrophil count: 400) and right otitis media developed. MMF and ganciclovir were withdrawn for a few days and reintroduced after WBC count reconstitution. We had no possibility to monitor MMF. Day 150 pp 65 neg, IgM still positive, IgG neg. No clinical signs of infection. Liver and kidney functions normal. After liver-kidney transplantation in a CMV high-risk pediatric patient (D+/R-), asymptomatic CMV primary infection developed. Although ganciclovir prophylaxis could not prevent the infection, it was mild and delayed. Due to bone marrow suppression, discontinuation of MMF and ganciclovir was necessary. Antigenemia assay pp 65 did not correlate very well with CMV viremia so it could not be recommended as a routine test. It should be used in combination with other CMV tests.
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PMID:[Primary cytomegalovirus infection after combined cadaveric transplantation of the liver and kidney]. 1287 72