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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The widespread use of ethyl alcohol suggests its potential importance in clinical medicine. There is no proven therapeutic effect in cardiac patients and its role as an etiologic factor in heart disease has been disputed over the years and attributed to coexistent malnutrition. The latter factor, however, has been dissociated from ethanol use in many patients with the cardiomyopathic form of heart failure. Major support for the role of ethanol as a toxic agent when used in large amounts for a prolonged period has been obtained in various species of animals, including the subhuman primate. Abnormalities include depression of ventricular function, and metabolic and morphologic changes that parallel the changes in humans with preclinical malfunction of the heart. While the mechanism of progression to heart failure or arrhythmias is not known, several factors may be associated. These include, particularly in males, the cumulative effects of ethanol alone or after intensified drinking episodes, simultaneous exposure to trace metals in excess, and occasional specific nutritional deficiency or superimposed infection. The low prevalence of clinical nutritional deficiency in patients with
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
and the infrequency of heart disease in patients with
cirrhosis
or neuropathy supports the view that the cardiac abnormality is commonly not dependent on malnutrition. Clinical data indicate that the cessation of alcohol intake may reverse the disease or interrupt its progression in many patients. However, the pathogenic process may continue unabated in some patients who become abstinent.
...
PMID:The role of ethanol in cardiac disease. 32 69
The "Peripheral Arterial Vasodilation" hypothesis most completely explains the clinical spectrum of
cirrhosis
ranging from compensated to decompensated to the hepatorenal syndrome (Figure 15-1). As the systemic peripheral vasodilation increases, the neurohumoral responses to arterial underfilling are stimulated with resultant renal vasoconstriction, sodium and water retention. Hypoalbuminemia and portal hypertension, as well as local effects of vasodilation at the capillary level, also contribute to ascites formation and peripheral edema. The suppressed plasma renin activity and aldosterone concentrations and exaggerated natriuresis, which are observed in some patients with early
cirrhosis
during HWI and the supine position, probably indicate greater central translocation of splanchnic fluid in these volume expanded cirrhotic patients when compared with normal subjects. This interpretation is supported by the greater increases in ANF during HWI in these patients when compared with controls. The neurohumoral responses to arterial vasodilation in
cirrhosis
combine to decrease distal sodium and water delivery, an event which impairs escape from the sodium retaining effects of aldosterone and causes resistance to the distal tubular effect of ANF (Figure 15-3). As discussed, the peripheral arterial vasodilation of
cirrhosis
is no doubt multifactorial in nature and the resultant arterial underfilling may be worsened by events that could impair the cardiac response to afterload reduction, including bile salt accumulation,
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
, and tense ascites decreasing cardiac preload. This pathogenetic schema of
cirrhosis
is compatible with the unifying body fluid volume hypothesis (Figure 15-3), which we have recently proposed.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of sodium and water retention in liver disease. 129 35
Cirrhosis
is associated with several circulatory abnormalities. A hyperkinetic circulation characterized by increased cardiac output and decreased arterial pressure and peripheral resistance is typical. Despite this hyperkinetic circulation, some patients with alcoholic cirrhosis have subclinical cardiomyopathy with evidence of abnormal ventricular function unmasked by physiologic or pharmacologic stress. Florid congestive
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
develops in a small percentage, but the concurrent presence of
cirrhosis
seems to retard the occurrence of overt heart failure. Even nonalcoholic
cirrhosis
may be associated with latent cardiomyopathy, although overt heart failure is not observed. Tense ascites is associated with some cardiac compromise, and removing or mobilizing ascitic fluid by paracentesis or peritoneovenous shunting results in short-term increases in cardiac output.
Cirrhosis
also appears to be associated with a decreased risk of major coronary atherosclerosis and an increased risk of bacterial endocarditis. Small hemodynamically insignificant pericardial effusions may be seen in ascitic patients. The release of atrial natriuretic peptide appears to be unimpaired in
cirrhosis
, although the kidney may be hyporesponsive to its natriuretic effects.
...
PMID:Cardiac abnormalities in liver cirrhosis. 269 Apr 63
The annual incidence of clinically apparent
cirrhosis of the liver
from all causes in the islands of Lewis and Harris has been found to be 5.5 cases per 100,000 and alcoholic cirrhosis to be 2.76 per 100,000. Sales of alcohol in the island amount to 6.85 million pounds giving a per capita spending on alcohol of 283 pounds in 1984. The incidence of
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
was found to be 3.7 cases per 100,000 and there were 120 admissions per 100,000 with illnesses directly related to alcoholism. It was suggested that the very low incidence of alcoholic cirrhosis despite the high per capita spending on alcohol could be due to inherited factors, the pattern of drinking and the type of alcohol consumed.
...
PMID:The low incidence of alcoholic cirrhosis in the islands of Lewis and Harris. 339 74
The mortality and the causes of death have been studied in a cohort consisting of 1548 male alcoholics in Stockholm. During the period 1969-1981 there were 542 cases of death in this population. The mortality rates were triple those for males in Stockholm generally. Using the official causes of death there was a highly significant excess mortality in the following diagnostic groups: Cancer in the upper digestive region, primary hepatic cancer,
cirrhosis
in the liver, pancreatitis, pneumonia, alcoholism and alcoholic poisoning, suicides and other causes of violent death as well as ischemic heart disease. The underlying and contributing causes of death on the death certificates were reclassified according to ICD-rules using clinical records and autopsy protocols. It was found that the underlying cause of death was incorrect in 21.8% of the cases. Important information was withheld in further 19.8%. After validation there was no longer any excess mortality in ischemic heart disease. The number of alcohol-related diagnoses, i.e.
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
,
cirrhosis
and fatty liver with alcoholism and alcoholic intoxication, was much greater. It is concluded that there is a underreporting of alcohol-related diseases and injuries which has a great influence on the reliability of death statistics.
...
PMID:Validation of diagnoses on death certificates for male alcoholics in Stockholm. 358 75
The authors examined in detail the clinical and laboratory data and pathologic findings for 12 patients with
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
who were autopsied in the preceding ten years to determine the types of liver disease prevalent in this population. Neither alcoholic hepatitis nor
cirrhosis
was present in any patient, and most of the hepatic changes could be related to the effects of acute and chronic congestive heart failure. The major hepatic lesions included centrilobular congestion and/or ischemic necrosis, cardiac sclerosis (fibrosis about central veins and in perisinusoidal spaces), mild canalicular cholestasis, portal fibrosis, and nodular regenerative hyperplasia. This last finding may account for macroscopic nodularity resembling
cirrhosis
as well as portal hypertension in patients with
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
. Although
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
and alcoholic hepatitis or
cirrhosis
were mutually exclusive in the patients studied, the factors responsible for this are at present uncertain.
...
PMID:Liver disease in alcoholic cardiomyopathy: evidence against cirrhosis. 684 Jul 53
The toxic effects of chronic ethanol abuse on cerebral and hepatic function have long been recognized. The role of ethanol abuse as an etiologic factor in heart disease is less clear and is often attributed to coexistent malnutrition. However, malnutrition has been dissociated from ethanol use in many patients with congestive cardiomyopathy. Studies in various animals provide major support for the role of ethanol as a toxic agent when used in large amounts for a prolonged period. Abnormalities that result from ethanol in test animals include depression of left ventricular performance and metabolic and morphologic changes that parallel the changes in human alcoholics with subclinical mechanical dysfunction of the heart, such as symptomatic cardiac arrhythmias, particularly during intensive alcohol ingestion. What causes the progression to heart failure or arrhythmias is not known, but several factors may be involved. These include, particularly in males, the cumulative effects of ethanol alone or after intensified drinking episodes, excessive exposure to trace metals or superimposed infection. The low prevalence of clinical nutritional deficiency in patients with
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
and the apparent infrequency of heart failure in patients with
cirrhosis
or neuropathy supports the view that the cardiac abnormality is often not dependent on malnutrition. Clinical data indicate that the cessation of alcohol intake may reverse the disease or interrupt its progression in many patients. However, the pathogenetic process may continued unabated in some who become abstinent.
...
PMID:Ethanol abuse and heart disease. 702 Sep 81
Based on anecdotal impressions, there is a common clinical perception that alcoholics with liver disease do not develop cardiomyopathy and that those with alcohol-induced cardiac disease are spared
cirrhosis
. To determine the relationship between
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
and
cirrhosis
, we carried out a prospective cross-sectional study that included: (1) 30 alcoholic men with cardiomyopathy; (2) 30 alcoholic men without cardiomyopathy (left ventricular ejection fraction > 55%); (3) 20 actively drinking alcoholics with
cirrhosis
; (4) 15 abstaining alcoholics with
cirrhosis
; and (5) 15 nonalcoholics with
cirrhosis
of other etiologies.
Cirrhosis
was observed in 13 of 30 patients with
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
(43%), compared with 2 of 30 alcoholics without cardiomyopathy (6%) (P < .001). Ten of the 20 active alcoholics with
cirrhosis
(50%) showed evidence of dilated cardiomyopathy. Actively drinking alcoholics with
cirrhosis
had a significantly lower mean ejection fraction and shortening fraction, as well as a greater mean end-diastolic diameter and left ventricular mass than abstaining alcoholics with
cirrhosis
. Cardiac studies of patients with nonalcoholic
cirrhosis
were normal. We conclude that a positive correlation exists between
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
and
cirrhosis
. Alcoholics admitted solely for cardiomyopathy have a higher prevalence of
cirrhosis
than unselected alcoholics without heart disease. Actively drinking alcoholics admitted only for
cirrhosis
show impaired cardiac performance, whereas abstaining alcoholics with liver disease tend to manifest normal cardiac function.
...
PMID:Relationship between cardiomyopathy and liver disease in chronic alcoholism. 763 21
To determine the significance of type II fiber atrophy in alcoholic myopathy and its relationship with ethanol-related diseases a prospective study was carried out in 100 chronic alcoholics who showed clinical suspicion of skeletal myopathy. Measurement of muscle strength, laboratory analysis, nutritional assessment and open biopsy of deltoid muscle were performed in each case, as well as electrophysiological testing for peripheral neuropathy. Hepatic ultrasonography and liver biopsy, echocardiography and radionuclide cardiac scanning were carried out in selected subjects. According to histomorphometric analysis, type II fiber atrophy was found in 33 cases (33%), being selective for type II B fiber in 23 (70%). Skeletal myopathy was diagnosed in 61 cases,
alcoholic cardiomyopathy
in 26, peripheral neuropathy in 23 and
cirrhosis
in 12. Patients with type II fiber atrophy had a significantly higher total lifetime dose of ethanol, presented a greater incidence of skeletal myopathy and peripheral neuropathy, and exhibited significantly lower values of percentage of ideal body weight and lean body mass than their counterparts. However, the only independent factors for developing type II fiber atrophy were the coexistence of caloric malnutrition (p = 0.004) and the presence of skeletal myopathy (p = 0.043). Selective type II fiber atrophy is a non-specific finding in alcohol-induced muscle damage appearing, overall, in the patients with caloric malnutrition as well as in those with histologic evidence of myopathy.
...
PMID:Significance of type II fiber atrophy in chronic alcoholic myopathy. 765 May 33
Seven thousand three hundred seventy-six sudden or violent manner of deaths were inspected or autopsied at Tokyo Metropolitan Medical Examiner's Office in 1989. Out of these victims, 693 (9.4%) victims were regarded as heavy drinkers on the basis of the drinking habits and the autopsy reports and 196 (2.7%) victims without past problem drinking were thought to be drunk at death from the family statements or the blood alcohol analysis. The total 889 (12.1%) alcohol-related cases (autopsy was performed on the 489 cases) were studied from epidemiological and etiological viewpoints. The average age of the alcohol-related victims (male: 811, female: 78) was 52 +/- 11 years. In middle-aged (45-54 years) men, 34% of the all sudden or violent deaths were alcohol-related. About half of the alcohol-related victims were living alone and jobless and they often died at home, particularly in the bed. In the alcohol-related victims, the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) analysis revealed that the average BAC of female was significantly higher than that of male. (2.12 +/- 1.73 mg/ml vs. 1.33 +/- 1.75, P < 0.01). This difference may be associated with sex difference in ethanol metabolism, body composition and drinking habits. Among the major causes of the alcohol-related deaths, alcoholic liver diseases accounted for 226 (25%), gastro-intestinal bleedings for 115 (13%), cardiovascular diseases for 105 (12%) and violent deaths (e.g., acute alcohol intoxication, falls, traffic accidents, suicide) for 329 (37%). By histopathological examination of the liver, about 30% of the alcoholic liver disease cases showed mainly fatty metamorphosis and 48% showed
liver cirrhosis
. Only 12% of the cirrhotics had either jaundice or ascites, suggesting hepatic failure.
Alcoholic cardiomyopathy
was suspected in only 11 cases. In conclusion, many people, particularly middle-aged men, lose their lives due to heavy drinking and there are many pathologically unexplainable sudden deaths of alcoholics.
...
PMID:[Alcohol and sudden death: a survey on alcohol-related deaths at tokyo Metropolitan Medical Examiner's Office (1989)]. 834 5
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