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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixteen cases of chronic Q fever are described. In eight there was a history of exposure to infection from farms or farm products. All had valvular heart disease, involving the mitral valve in nine and the aortic valve in seven. Infection occurred on a prosthetic valve in two patients. Arterial embolism was common. Venous thrombosis occured in three patients, and pulmonary embolism occurred in three other patients. Complement fixing antibodies to phase 1 antigen were found in a titre of 1:200 or greater in all except two patients. In one of these post-mortem examination revealed rickettsial bodies in mitral valve vegetations, and in the other Coxiella burneti was isolated from heart valve tissue. The majority presented with infective endocarditis but two presented primarily with liver disease. All patients had evidence of liver involvement and in one this led to death from
cirrhosis
. Abnormal tests of liver function, particularly hyperglobulinaemia, raised alkaline phsophatase and abnormal bromsulphthalein retention were found in all patients. Hepatic histology was abnormal in all eight patients in whom it was studied. The commonest features were mononuclear cell infiltration of the portal tracts and prominence of the sinusoidal Kupffer cells. Patchy focal necrosis of parenchymal cells, granulomata, fatty change, and
eosinophilia
of the sinusoidal walls were also noted in several patients and
cirrhosis
developed in one. Six patients had a purpuric rash, and in 12 there was thrombocytopenia. It is suggested that the presence of hepatomegaly and liver involvement and thrombocytopenia may help to differentiate Q fever endocarditis from bacterial endocarditis. Raised serum IgM and IgA levels occured frequently, but with only a moderate dominance of IgM. Sheep cell agglutination and latex fixation tests for rheumatoid factor were occasionally positive. Several features of the disease suggest the possibility that immune-complex mechanisms may play a role in chronic Q fever. Treatment was with prolonged courses of tetracycline usually combined with lincomycin. Seven patients underwent valve replacement surgery for haemodynamic reasons. Five patients died; two from heart failure, one from
cirrhosis
, one seven days after valve replacement and one from intraperitoneal haemorrhage following percutaneous liver biopsy. Three patients have survived for more than five years, and another six for more than three and a half years after diagnosis. Of these nine patients, three received medical therapy alone and six required valve replacement as well. Antibiotics have been discontinued in four patients who have had valve surgery and three others. Six patients had received antibiotics for continuous periods varying from 29-62 months. In the period after stopping therapy varying from 15-21 months, no relapse has occured. A seventh patient, who had received antibiotics for four months prior to valve replacement, has survived 43 months after the withdrawal of antibiotics...
...
PMID:Chronic Q fever. 94 Sep 18
Analysis of the overt hepatic disease that developed in 114 patients while taking isoniazid for chemoprophylaxis of tuberculosis showed it to be mainly hepatocellular. The severity of the hepatic injury was manifested by the 13 fatalities (12.3%) and by the histological demonstration of submassive necrosis in 9 and massive necrosis in 4 patients. The 20 other patients from whom hepatic tissue was available for study included 16 with moderately severe acute hepatocellular injury (4 had a mixed hepatocellular-cholestatic pattern), and 4 with chronic hepatic diseases (1 had
cirrhosis
). Clinical manifestations of hepatic disease prior to the onset of jaundice included vague digestive complaints in 55% of the group and "viral' disease-like complaints in 35%, some with and some without gastrointestinal symptoms. Jaundice was the presenting complaint in 10% of patients. Fever and rash were reported in very few patients (less than 4%) and
eosinophilia
of modest degree was noted in approximately 10%. Hepatic injury was recognized during the 1st month of isoniazid administration in 15% and during the 2nd month in an additional 31%. In the remaining 54% of patients, the drug had been administered for periods of 2 to 11 months before hepatic injury was noted. Analyses of variables suggested that hepatic injury which presented after 2 months, especially with bilirubin levels that exceeded 20 mg per 100 ml, was more likely to have a fatal outcome than disease that presented during the first 2 months even with higher bilirubin levels. The case fatality rate was significantly higher in black females than in black males or in whites of either sex. The observations of the present study offer no support for the view that isoniazid-induced hepatic disease results from hypersensitivity to the drug. Other data that support the view that hepatotoxic metabolites of isoniazid may be responsible for the injury are considered.
...
PMID:Isoniazid-associated hepatitis in 114 patients. 115 39
We report the case of a patient with cryptogenic
cirrhosis
, new onset ascites, and hyperinfection with Strongyloides stercoralis who had significant
eosinophilia
of the peritoneal fluid. The
eosinophilia
resolved with treatment of the S. stercoralis infection, and did not recur during two subsequent episodes of ascites and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Eosinophilic ascites is rare in parasitic infection, but it has been described in a variety of disorders which are discussed.
...
PMID:Eosinophilic ascites due to hyperinfection with Strongyloides stercoralis. 198 60
A large number of drugs may be associated with impaired bile flow. Drug-associated cholestasis presents like other forms of cholestasis with pale stools, dark urine, pruritus and jaundice. Abdominal pain may be present in some instances and can be so severe as to lead to a false diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Biochemically, drug-associated cholestasis resembles other forms of cholestasis although the presence of
eosinophilia
may suggest drug involvement. Many types of drug-induced cholestasis run a benign course with resolution of signs and symptoms within 3 months but occasionally the jaundice can take a year or more to resolve. Progression to
cirrhosis
is uncommon. Some patients may develop a syndrome resembling primary biliary cirrhosis. The mechanisms of drug-associated cholestasis are uncertain but may arise from alteration of bile formation within the hepatocyte or bile excretion at the level of the canaliculus or the extrahepatic ducts. Histological examination of the liver may be helpful in classifying the types of jaundice but the diagnosis of drug-induced cholestasis is usually one of temporal association and exclusion of other causes.
...
PMID:Drug-induced jaundice. 265 64
Glafenine was associated with hepatic injury in 38 cases. The causal relationship was assessed on the basis of the temporal relationship with drug use, course and exclusion of other causes. In 27 cases a causal relationship was considered likely, i.e. 'probable' (12 cases) or 'possible' (15 cases), whereas in 11 cases it was either unlikely or unclassifiable. In both the 'probable' and 'possible' groups 60-70% of individuals were women. Jaundice was present in three-quarters of cases in both groups.
Eosinophilia
was more frequent in the group of 'probable' cases, and this group had the highest case-fatality rate (42%). Onset varied from 2 days (after a rechallenge) to 8 months, but most cases appeared between 2 weeks and 4 months after starting therapy. Histology in 22 cases showed a predominantly hepatocellular pattern, varying from spotty panlobular necrosis, centrilobular and (sub)massive necrosis (acute pattern) to fibrosis and
cirrhosis
(chronic pattern). The chemical structure of glafenine and the clinicopathological pattern it induces resemble that of cinchophen. The incidence is unknown. Either metabolic idiosyncrasy or an immunoallergic mechanism seems to be responsible.
...
PMID:Glafenine-associated hepatic injury. Analysis of 38 cases and review of the literature. 287 73
Netilmicin (NTL), a new semisynthesized aminoglycoside, was evaluated in 11 episodes of infection in 10 patients, who had severe underlying diseases, such as acute myocardial infarction, cerebral infarction, malignancy and
hepatic cirrhosis
. The infection was bacteremia in 3 cases, urinary tract infections in 3 cases and respiratory tract infections in 5 cases. NTL was administered intramuscularly at a dose of 100 mg twice a day for 3 to 14 days. Overall clinical efficacy was only 40%, including excellent in 2 cases, good in 2 cases, fair in 3 cases and poor in 3 cases. Bacteriologically, 2 episodes of E. coli, 2 of S. marcescens and 1 of K. pneumoniae were eradicated, whereas, 2 of P. aeruginosa were decreased, and 1 of K. pneumoniae and 1 of P. rettgeri were persisted. Transient
eosinophilia
was observed in 1 case, and also nephrotoxicity was encountered in 1 case.
...
PMID:[Clinical studies on netilmicin]. 648 55
Ticrynafen, a uricosuric diuretic, was withdrawn from clinical use in the United States in 1980 after having been implicated as the cause of a number of instances of serious hepatic injury. In this report, we analyze 340 cases of ticrynafen-associated hepatic disease reported to the manufacturer from the time of initial marketing until shortly after the drug had been recalled. Jaundice was recorded in 246 of 287 patients with sufficient clinical information, and 25 (10.2%) of these icteric patients died. The high levels of serum aminotransferase and the case fatality rate are consistent with the hepatocellular injury that was evident in all of the histologic material. In three-fourths of the cases available to us for histologic study, the lesion was that of acute hepatocellular injury. In the remaining cases there was evidence of chronic active hepatitis and/or
cirrhosis
. Comparison of demographic characteristics of the total population exposed to ticrynafen with the subset developing hepatic injury suggests a proportionately higher risk of injury for females over the age of 60 years. The variable and unusually prolonged latent period and lack of reported
eosinophilia
or rash generally suggest a mechanism other than hypersensitivity. However, the recurrence of hepatic injury in 15 of the 16 patients challenged with the drug and the prominence of eosinophils in hepatic tissue in some of the cases suggests that hypersensitivity may also play a pathogenetic role. Accordingly, there is reason to incriminate both metabolic idiosyncrasy and hypersensitivity in the mechanism of injury.
...
PMID:Ticrynafen-associated hepatic injury: analysis of 340 cases. 670 6
Analyses of 23 fatal instances of hepatic injury in patients taking valproic acid reveals that all but three were less than 20 years old, and all but four had been taking the drugs for more than 1 month. Convulsions, facial edema, lassitude, and vomiting were prominent clinical features. Hypoglycemia was recorded in six patients. Rash and
eosinophilia
were not seen. Values for transaminases were modestly elevated in most patients. Most levels of SGOT were below 500 IU, and SGPT levels were below 200 IU. Livers showed microvesicular steatosis in most patients, usually accompanies by necrosis. Four patients had
cirrhosis
. Overt valproic acid-induced hepatic injury appears to be rare and hence, by definition, idiosyncratic. That it may be an idiosyncratic exaggeration of a much more frequent phenomenon is suggested by the higher incidence of seemingly trivial injury. The idiosyncrasy appears to be metabolic rather than immunologic, and the available information leads to the plausible hypothesis that a metabolite is responsible for the microvesicular steatosis seen in most fatal cases. The steatosis resembles that of Reye's syndrome and Jamaican vomiting sickness, and there is reason to believe that the metabolite responsible for the steatosis resembles the agent responsible for Jamaican vomiting sickness. A different metabolite is presumably responsible for the necrosis seen in many of the cases.
...
PMID:Valproate-induced hepatic injury: analyses of 23 fatal cases. 681 94
The authors report on 6 cases of severe liver damage following clomethacin treatment. Three patients developed prolonged hepatitis, lasting more than 3 months, with biochemical and histological signs of activity; one patient committed suicide by overdosage and died of subacute necrotizing hepatitis; one patient died of chronic cirrhotic hepatitis after prolonged clomethacin-alpha-methyldopa combined treatment, and there was one case of active hepatitis on latent
cirrhosis
. Drug toxicity was suggested by the presence of jaundice with occasional fever, urticaria or pruritus and
eosinophilia
, and by the lack of any other cause. It was confirmed in 3 cases by relapse of the condition after re-introduction of the drug, in one case by the circumstances surrounding death (attempted suicide) and in one case by the deterioration observed with increased dosage. In one patient the responsibility of clomethacin was shared with alpha-methyldopa, a potentially hepatotoxic drug.
...
PMID:[Liver damage following clomethacin treatment. 6 cases, including 2 deaths (author's transl)]. 729 Sep 27
The use of automated haematological analysers to differentiate leucocytes has become more widespread. Unusual
eosinophilia
in a 57 year old man with
liver cirrhosis
, caused by hepatitis C infection, and abnormal blood counts detected using a manual method (eosinophils, 50%) was not detected by an automated analyser using the electrical impedance method (0.3%) or the optical method (14.1%). It is important to check blood films when cell counts are apparently abnormal, even for automated haematological examination.
...
PMID:Unusual eosinophilia not detected by an automated haematological analyser in a patient with liver cirrhosis. 946 54
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