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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A novel histologic phenotype of chronic esophagitis, ie, lymphocytic esophagitis, is reported in 20 patients. Lymphocytic esophagitis is characterized by high numbers of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) gathered mainly around peripapillary fields and by none (n = 12) to occasional (n = 8) CD15+ intraepithelial granulocytes. IELs expressed CD3, CD4 (42%), CD8 (36%), and granzyme B (0.2%), whereas T-cell intracytoplasmic antigen (TIA) 1 was not expressed. Of the 20 patients, 11 (55%) were 17 years or younger. Of 20 patients, 5 had no symptoms in the upper gastrointestinal tract. Only 4 (20%) of 20 patients had symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux disease and 6 (30%) of gastroduodenitis; 2 (10%) had celiac disease; 4 (20%) had carcinoma of the esophagus (1) or elsewhere (3); 1 (5%) each had hiatus hernia, gastric ulcer/asthma/blood hypertension, Hashimoto thyroiditis, and
cirrhosis
/diabetes; and 8 (40%) had
Crohn
disease. Hence, a novel histologic phenotype of chronic esophagitis called lymphocytic esophagitis is reported. Because phenotype is defined as the visible features resulting from the interaction between the genetic makeup and the environment, it is suggested that those factors might have a decisive role in the development of lymphocytic esophagitis.
...
PMID:Lymphocytic esophagitis: a histologic subset of chronic esophagitis. 1661 48
Hepatocellular carcinoma is known to be associated with underlying liver diseases, such as
cirrhosis
, hemochromatosis, and chronic viral hepatitis. All reported cases of hepatocellular carcinoma in association with
Crohn's disease
involve patients treated previously with azathioprine or both azathioprine and steroids. However, hepatocellular carcinoma associated with the use of azathioprine and infliximab has not been reported. In this report, we describe an unusual case of hepatocellular carcinoma and focal hepatic glycogenosis (FHG) occurring in a non-cirrhotic
Crohn's disease
patient who has been treated with both azathioprine and infliximab.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma occurring in a patient with Crohn's disease treated with both azathioprine and infliximab. 1667 Sep 38
Systemic disease can produce changes in the nails. Perhaps the best known example of this is koilonychia as a sequale of iron deficiency anemia. "Half and half nail" is a type of pseudoleuconychia that can be caused by chronic renal disease, Kawasaki's disease,
cirrhosis
, and zinc deficiency. It has not been described in patients with
Crohn's disease
yet. Four male patients with
Crohn's disease
were observed. None of them had extraintestinal manifestations of
Crohn's disease
. The average duration of the disease was 5.25 (range, 1-10) years. The nail alterations were defined with a portion of the nail being as much as 15 to 40 percent of normal color distally, whereas the rest of the nail was white. The contrast between the two zones remains sharply demarcated even after constricting venous return. Histologic examination was not performed. Every patient had zinc deficiency but not hypalbuminaemia or sideropenia. After review of relevant literature (MEDLINE, PubMed, etc.), we found that half-and-half nail had not been described in
Crohn's disease
. This study was designed to highlight the fact that the half-and-half nail, which was thought to be a sign of chronic renal failure, also occurs in patients with
Crohn's disease
. The relationship of this symptom to clinical activity cannot yet be assessed and has only been observed in four cases.
...
PMID:The half-and-half nail: a new sign of Crohn's disease? Report of four cases. 1669 71
Inflammatory bowel diseases are a result of an aberrant mucosal immune response to gut microflora. Several groups have reported newly diagnosed inflammatory bowel diseases following solid organ transplantation and subsequent immunosuppressive therapy. We describe four cases of newly diagnosed inflammatory bowel diseases following liver transplantation in a pool of 120 transplanted patients. These patients had no prior history of inflammatory bowel diseases or primary sclerosing cholangitis and were immunosuppressed. Two patients were transplanted for a hepatitis C related
cirrhosis
, one for alcoholic cirrhosis and one patient for autoimmune
cirrhosis
. Three patients were diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and one with
Crohn's disease
. These four patients were on a cyclosporin monotherapy when their inflammatory bowel diseases were diagnosed. These data suggest that cyclosporin monotherapy following solid organ transplantation does not prevent development of inflammatory bowel diseases.
...
PMID:[De novo inflammatory bowel diseases after liver transplantation: description of four new cases and a review of the literature]. 1707 59
Gallstone disease is common: >700,000 cholecystectomies and costs of approximately 6.5 billion dollars annually in the U.S. The burden of disease is epidemic in American Indians (60-70%); a corresponding decrease occurs in Hispanics of mixed Indian origin. Ten to fifteen per cent of white adults in developed countries harbour gallstones. Frequency is further reduced in Black Americans, East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. In developed countries, cholesterol gallstones predominate; 15% are black pigment. East Asians develop brown pigment stones in bile ducts, associated with biliary infection or parasites, or in intrahepatic ducts (hepatolithiasis). Certain risk factors for gallstones are immutable: female gender, increasing age and ethnicity/family (genetic traits). Others are modifiable: obesity, the metabolic syndrome, rapid weight loss, certain diseases (
cirrhosis
,
Crohn's disease
) and gallbladder stasis (from spinal cord injury or drugs like somatostatin). The only established dietary risk is a high caloric intake. Protective factors include diets containing fibre, vegetable protein, nuts, calcium, vitamin C, coffee and alcohol, plus physical activity.
...
PMID:Gallstone disease: Epidemiology of gallbladder stone disease. 1712 83
Ever since the first embryonic stem cells were isolated in the 1990s scientists and clinicians as well as the general public have followed the development of the field with great attention. As unspecialized cells capable of dividing, renewing and differentiating into specialized cells, stem cells hold great promise as a therapeutic strategy for many diseases, especially those of degenerative nature. In 2006, stem cells were actively investigated in preclinical and clinical settings to manage heart failure, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, spinal cord injury, stroke, hematologic disorders, renal cell carcinoma, solid tumor cancer,
Crohn's disease
and
cirrhosis
, among other disorders. Likewise, biotech and pharmaceutical industry highlighted stem cells and associated products and technologies as useful tools for drug discovery that provide relevant clinical models and ensure efficacious transition of investigational compounds into preclinical testing.
...
PMID:Stem cells: therapeutic present and future. 1744 Jun 35
Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) is a highly pleiotropic cytokine that plays an important role in wound healing, angiogenesis, immunoregulation and cancer. The cells of the immune system produce the TGF-beta1 isoform, which exerts powerful anti-inflammatory functions, and is a master regulator of the immune response. However, this is context dependent, because TGF-beta can contribute to the differentiation of both regulatory (suppressive) T cells (Tr cells) and inflammatory Th17 cells. While TGF-beta might be underproduced in some autoimmune diseases, it is overproduced in many pathological conditions. This includes pulmonary fibrosis, glomerulosclerosis, renal interstitial fibrosis,
cirrhosis
,
Crohn's disease
, cardiomyopathy, scleroderma and chronic graft-vs-host disease. In neoplastic disease, TGF-beta suppresses the progression of early lesions, but later this effect is lost and cancer cells produce TGF-beta, which then promotes metastasis. This cytokine also contributes to the formation of the tumor stroma, angiogenesis and immunosuppression. In view of this, several approaches are being studied to inhibit TGF-beta activity, including neutralizing antibodies, soluble receptors, receptor kinase antagonist drugs, antisense reagents and a number of less specific drugs such as angiotensin II antagonists and tranilast. It might be assumed that TGF-beta blockade would result in severe inflammatory disease, but this has not been the case, presumably because the neutralization is only partial. In contrast, the systemic administration of TGF-beta for therapeutic purposes is limited by toxicity and safety concerns, but local administration appears feasible, especially to promote wound healing. Immunotherapy or vaccination stimulating TGF-beta production and/or Tr differentiation might be applied to the treatment of autoimmune diseases. The benefits of new therapies targeting TGF-beta are under intense investigation.
...
PMID:Pathobiology of transforming growth factor beta in cancer, fibrosis and immunologic disease, and therapeutic considerations. 1772 48
Ever since the first embryonic stem cells were isolated in the 1990s scientists and clinicians as well as the general public have followed the development of the field with great attention. As unspecialized cells capable of dividing, renewing and differentiating into specialized cells, stem cells hold great promise as a therapeutic strategy for many diseases, especially those of degenerative nature. In 2006, stem cells were actively investigated in preclinical and clinical settings to manage heart failure, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, spinal cord injury, stroke, hematologic disorders, renal cell carcinoma, solid tumor cancer,
Crohn's disease
and
cirrhosis
, among other disorders. Likewise, biotech and pharmaceutical industry highlighted stem cells and associated products and technologies as useful tools for drug discovery that provide relevant clinical models and ensure efficacious transition of investigational compounds into preclinical testing.
...
PMID:Stem cells: therapeutic present and future. 1829 42
Autoimmune liver diseases in childhood includes Autoimmune Hepatitis (AIH) and Primary (Autoimmune) Sclerosing Cholangitis (P(A)SC). Both diseases are characterized by a chronic, immune-mediated liver inflammation involving mainly hepatocytes in AIH and bile ducts in PSC. Both diseases, if untreated, lead to
liver cirrhosis
. AIH could be classified, according to the autoantibodies pattern, into two subtypes: AIH type 1 presents at any age as a chronic liver disease with recurrent flares occasionally leading to
liver cirrhosis
and liver failure. Characterizing autoantibodies are anti-nuclear (ANA) and anti-smooth muscle (SMA), usually at high titer (>1:100). These autoantibodies are not specific and probably do not play a pathogenic role. AIH type 2 shows a peak of incidence in younger children, however with a fluctuating course. The onset is often as an acute liver failure. Anti-liver kidney microsome autoantibodies type 1 (LKM1) and/or anti-liver cytosol autoantibody (LC1) are typically found in AIH type 2 and these autoantibodies are accounted to have a potential pathogenic role. Diagnosis of AIH is supported by the histological finding of interface hepatitis with massive portal infiltration of mononuclear cells and plasmocytes. Inflammatory bile duct lesions are not unusual and may suggest features of ''overlap'' with P(A)SC. A diagnostic scoring system has been developed mainly for scientific purposes, but his diagnostic role in pediatric age is debated. Conventional treatment with steroids and azathioprine is the milestone of therapy and it is proved effective. Treatment withdrawal however should be attempted only after several years. Cyclosporin A is the alternative drug currently used for AIH and it is effective as steroids. P(A)SC exhibit a peak of incidence in the older child, typically in pre-pubertal age with a slight predominance of male gender. Small bile ducts are always concerned and the histological picture shows either acute cholangitis (bile duct infiltration and destruction) and/or lesions suggesting chronic cholangitis as well (bile duct paucity and/or proliferation, periductal sclerosis). Small bile ducts damage may be associated, at onset or in the following years, with lesions of larger bile ducts with duct wall irregularities, strictures, dilations, and beading resulting in the characteristic ''bead-on-a-string'' appearance. The ''small duct'' (autoimmune) sclerosing cholangitis is also called autoimmune cholangitis. PSC is strictly associated to a particular form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) which shows features not typical of ulcerative colitis neither of
Crohn's disease
. Symptoms related to IBD often are present at onset (abdominal pain, weight loss, bloody stools) but the liver disease is frequently asymptomatic and it may be discovered fortuitously. Treatment of PSC is particularly challenging. In case of ''small duct'' SC or in case of evidence active inflammation on liver biopsy, immunosuppressive treatment is probably useful while in case of large bile ducts non inflammatory sclerosis, immunosuppression is probably uneffective. Ursodeoxycholic acid, however, may leads to an improvement of liver biochemistry even if there's no evidence that it may alter the course of disease. Thus, liver transplantation, is often necessary in the long term follow-up, even with a risk of disease recurrence. In adjunction to these two main disorders, many patients show an''overlap'' disease with features of both AIH and PSC. In such disorders the immune-mediated damage concerns both the hepatocyte and the cholangiocyte with a continuous clinical spectrum from AIH with minimal bile ducts lesions and PSC with portal inflammation and active inflammatory liver damage.
...
PMID:Autoimmune diseases of the liver and biliary tract and overlap syndromes in childhood. 1921 8
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is usually known to develop in patients with underlying high-risk liver diseases such as viral hepatitis,
cirrhosis
and alcohol abuse, whereas reports dealing with HCC in
Crohn's disease
(CD) are limited. We present a case of HCC, which developed sequentially within a short period in a 52-year-old Japanese man with a 36-year history of CD without risky conditions for HCC. He also had not taken immunosuppressants such as azathioprine. Although the definitive etiological factors contributing to hepatocarcinogenesis in the present case could not be elucidated, further close surveillance is required.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma and Crohn's disease: a case report and review. 1944 77
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