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)

In addition to benefiting from public health programs for all Americans, American Indians and Alaska Natives are eligible for health services from the Indian Health Service (IHS), U.S. Public Health Service. Indian Health Service provides comprehensive health services, including nutrition and dietetics, to American Indians and Alaska Natives living on or near federal Indian reservations or in traditional Indian territory, such as Oklahoma and Alaska. Dramatic improvements have occurred in the health of native Americans since IHS was transferred to the Public Health Service in 1955. Infant mortality rate, maternal deaths, and deaths related to infectious diseases have all decreased. Chronic diseases are now major causes of death. Nutritional factors contribute to at least 4 of the 10 leading causes of American Indian and Alaska Native deaths--heart disease, cancer, cirrhosis, and diabetes--and to the prevalence of overweight, obesity, hypertension, and dental caries. There is still incomplete information on nutritional status and present dietary patterns, nutritive values of native foods, and nutrition education knowledge of the population. Priority nutrition objectives have been developed to address those issues.
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PMID:Nutrition in American Indian health: past, present, and future. 353 63

A 71-year-old man was admitted to an emergency room because of postextraction hemorrhage and died of asphyxia caused by airway obstruction. About 40 days earlier, he had had 11 carious teeth removed without postextraction bleeding. At autopsy, liver cirrhosis was found, but examination of his previous extractions and postmortem external findings did not show a general hemorrhagic tendency. The surgical incision in the gingiva had been sutured, and no damage to the bony socket or large vasculature was found. We could not determine the etiologic source of the decedent's rapidly increasing hematoma. Postextraction hemorrhage or hematoma is a common complication in routine dental extraction, but marked hematoma formation around the airway may cause critical respiratory problems in the short run. In such cases, the maintenance of the airway, including control of hemorrhage, is necessary at an early stage.
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PMID:Asphyxial death caused by postextraction hematoma. 816 23

Until the last several years liver transplantation was considered an experimental treatment procedure. Nowadays virtually any disease process, that is in terminal stage, is treatable with transplantation. The introduction of cyclosporine in 1980 and the recent use of OKT3 monoclonal antibody now allows a 5-year survival rate of 60-70%. The causes of early death of patients who survive after surgery are infective complications, multiorgan failure and acute rejection of the allograft. In the literature and in our experience, bacterial sepsis is the most common cause of deaths occurring during the first postoperative months while most deaths after one year are generally related to chronic rejection of the allograft. The risk of infection is also increased by the over-immunosuppression of these patients always treated with a high dose of immunosuppressive agents when evidence of acute graft rejection is found. Regarding these problems, patients being prepared for liver transplantation should be evaluated for their dental health. The medical indications of 80 transplant recipients and the current status of liver transplantation are reviewed in this article. We describe the dental status of these patients that should receive indicated dental care before surgery. Most patients (90%) were affected by chronic active hepatitis while the number of primitive cirrhosis was significantly lower. Very poor dental hygiene was found in 85% of patients while 45% were affected by advanced periodontal disease and 12% by a chronic gingivitis. Dental caries were observed in 67% while in 20% of cases endodontic periapical lesions were found and only 2% of these resulted as radicular cysts. Indicated dental care consisted in 87% of cases in dental hygiene instructions, in 85% in scaling and root planing, in 63% in conservative restorations and in 40% in endodontic treatments. Dental treatment guidelines before transplantation are described with particular attention to prevent risk of infection using antibiotic prophylaxis for invasive dental procedures. Dentists, after surgery must be also prepared to deal with excessive bleeding related to a severe liver disfunction; for this purpose an appropriate protocol is also described. The monitoring of oral and general health conditions and the achievement of specific protocols of prophylaxis are helpful in the prevention of complications and are fundamental to obtain the best results with liver transplantation improving the quality of life of these patients.
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PMID:[The dental assessment of the patient waiting for a liver transplant]. 902 87

Twenty-five cases of nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae infection were recorded in Poland during 2004-2012, of which 18 were invasive. Alcoholism, homelessness, hepatic cirrhosis, and dental caries were predisposing factors for infection. However, for 17% of cases, no concomitant diseases or predisposing factors were found.
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PMID:Nontoxigenic highly pathogenic clone of Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Poland, 2004-2012. 2534 Aug 86

Bacterial infections are frequent complications in patients with chronic liver disease (CLD). A potential source of infection may be dental foci. This study was carried out to assess the association of CLD with dental caries and periodontal disease. Dental caries and periodontal examinations were performed prospectively in patients with CLD (group A) and controls without any liver disease (group B). Similar examination was also carried out in alcoholics without liver disease (group C) as well as in cases with portal hypertension but no liver disease (group D) i.e. patients with Non Cirrhotic Portal Fibrosis and Extrahepatic portal obstruction. A total of 231 subjects (Group A:83, group B: 75, group C:46 and group D:27) were studied. Group A included 32 cases with chronic hepatitis B&C, 26 with alcoholic cirrhosis, 14 with postnecrotic cirrhosis, and 11 with cryptogenic cirrhosis. Measures of oral hygiene (p < 0.01), dental care (p < 0.001), and periodontal parameters were worse and the number of teeth requiring treatment (p < 0.05) was higher in alcoholics with or without cirrhosis than in healthy subjects and nonalcoholic patients with cirrhosis. Alcoholics had a lower, total number of teeth than patients without alcohol abuse and healthy controls (p < 0.01). The dental caries and periodontal status of patients with nonalcoholic cirrhosis did not differ significantly from group B. The severity and duration of liver disease had no influence on dental caries and periodontal disease. The presence of chronic alcohol abuse rather than cirrhosis or portal hypertension is a major predisposing factor for dental caries and periodontal diseases. In alcoholics, these diseases appear to be caused primarily by bad oral hygiene and poor dental care.
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PMID:DENTAL CARIES AND PERIODONTAL DISORDERS IN CHRONIC LIVER DISEASE. 2736 73