Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This article summarizes our present knowledge concerning drug-induced cholestasis by lesions of the bile ducts. Acute or chronic ductular and ductal cholestasis are induced by a few drugs. The acute form may mimic viral hepatitis or biliary tract obstruction. The outcome is generally good. The mechanism may be immunoallergic. The clinical presentation of the chronic form resembles that of primary biliary cirrhosis or sclerosing cholangitis. Its prognosis is generally good and characterized by a complete recovery. However, an evolution to biliary cirrhosis is sometimes possible. The mechanism could also be immunoallergic. Extrahepatic cholestasis is frequently observed after intra-arterial infusion of floxuridine. The prognosis is generally poor. The mechanism of this sclerosing cholangitis may be ischaemic.
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PMID:[Secondary drug-induced cholestasis with bile duct involvement]. 205 47

Cholestasis is a condition, where the bile flow into the intestine is defective. The causes may be extrahepatic (in large biliary ducts) or intrahepatic (at the level of hepatocytes or minor biliary ducts). The lack of bile in the intestine results in serious consequences, mainly malabsorption, malnutrition and skeletal changes. The compounds, which are normally excreted in the bile, accumulate and liver biliary cirrhosis ensues. Cholestatis is characterized by a typical laboratory picture, outlined in publications, which serves for differentiation of individual forms of cholestasis. There are various causes of cholestasis, listed in the survey. Extrahepatic cholestasis must be treated as early as possible (by endoscopy or surgery). The highest attention is devoted mainly to chronic intrahepatic cholestatis: primary biliary cirrhosis. It affects mainly women at middle age and is most frequently considered as an autoimmune disease. A survey of present therapeutic possibilities for cholestasis is given. Ursodeoxycholic acid became the main therapeutic drug. It must be administered as early as possible and for long period of time in all cases.
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PMID:[Cholestasis]. 1451 97

Cytologic criteria were evaluated for their diagnostic value in liver disease in dogs. Therefore, histopathologic and cytologic examination was performed on liver biopsy samples of 73 dogs with liver diseases and 28 healthy dogs. Logistic regression analysis was used to select the measured parameters to be included in a multistep approach. With the logistic regression method, different characteristic cytologic parameters could be defined for each histopathologic diagnosis. In malignant lymphoma of the liver, the presence of large numbers of lymphoblasts with a minimum of 5% of all cells was found. Clusters of epithelial cells with several cytologic characteristics of malignancy intermixed with normal hepatocytes were indicative of metastatic carcinoma or cholangiocellular carcinoma. Liver cells in hepatocellular carcinoma were characterized by a high nucleus/cytoplasm ratio, large cell diameters, increased numbers of nucleoli per nuclei, small numbers of cytoplasmic vacuoles, and frequently, small numbers of lymphocytes. Extrahepatic cholestasis was characterized by excessive extracellular bile pigment in the form of biliary casts, an increased number of nucleoli within hepatocytes, decreased hepatic cell size, and low numbers of lymphocytes. In destructive cholangiolitis, increased numbers of neutrophils and a small mean nuclear size within hepatocytes were seen. Acute and nonspecific reactive hepatitis are diagnosed based on the presence of moderate reactive nuclear patterns, including more pronounced chromatin, prominent nucleoli, increased numbers of inflammatory cells, excluding lymphocytes, and the absence of increased numbers of bile duct cell clusters. Increased number of mast cells also was indicative of nonspecific reactive hepatitis. Important cytologic criteria for the diagnosis of liver cirrhosis, in addition to chronic hepatitis, are intracellular bile accumulation and increased numbers of bile duct cell clusters. In summary, the stepwise approach based on logistic regression presented in this study might be helpful in the objective cytologic diagnosis of hepatic diseases.
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PMID:A multistep approach in the cytologic evaluation of liver biopsy samples of dogs with hepatic diseases. 1534 18

The scope of this article precludes an 'in depth' description of all liver problems and I will limit this review to anaesthesia for biliary atresia - a common hepatic problem in the very young - and partial hepatectomy in older children. I will not be discussing the problems of anaesthetising children with hepatitis, cirrhosis, congenital storage diseases or liver failure. Extrahepatic biliary obstruction is an obliterative cholangiopathy of infancy which is fatal if untreated. Diagnosis involves exclusion of other causes of neonatal jaundice and treatment involves a hepatico portoenterostomy carried out at the earliest. This is a review of current concepts in anaesthesia and postoperative management of neonates with extrahepatic biliary atresia. Anaesthesia for hepatic resection has seen great changes in recent times with the improvement in surgical techniques, technology and a better understanding of the underlying physiology. These are reviewed along with the problems of postoperative pain management.
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PMID:Anaesthesia for biliary atresia and hepatectomy in paediatrics. 2329 87