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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Significant liver disease developed in 14 patients after renal transplantation. Nine patients had morphologic and functional evidence of chronic active hepatitis. In general, these patients had few symptoms of liver disease, even though the course of chronic active hepatitis was progressive. Despite large doses of prednisone, cirrhosis ultimately developed in five patients. The cause of chronic active hepatitis could not be related to azathioprine or methyldopa therapy because there was no perceptible change in the course of liver disease after treatment with these drugs was stopped. Three patients were persistently positive for hepatitis B surface antigen. Isolated instances of granulomatous hepatitis (Mycobacterium kansasii) and of prolonged intrahepatic cholestasis were encountered in patients with chronic active hepatitis. Two patients had acute cytomegalovirus hepatitis. There was one episode each of fulminant herpes simplex hepatitis and severe fatty metamorphosis.
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PMID:Liver disease in renal transplant recipients. 18 93

Hepatitis may be caused by hepatitis A virus, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus (classic non-A non-B viral hepatitis), hepatitis D virus (delta agent), and hepatitis E virus (epidemic non-A non-B viral hepatitis). Cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, and herpes simplex virus may also occasionally cause hepatitis. Some forms of hepatitis carry the risks of chronic infection, cirrhosis, or hepatocellular carcinoma. Treatment options for viral hepatitis are limited and, in many cases, still under investigation. Prophylaxis is available for many forms of hepatitis and should be offered to those at risk.
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PMID:Viral hepatitis. The new ABC's. 212 Jun 86

In the U.S. oral cancer accounts for 2.1% of all cancers and 1% of cancer deaths. Two to three times as many males as females are affected. Blacks have more intra-oral cancer than whites, and their incidence and mortality rates have increased in recent years. The etiologic process very likely involves several factors. The major etiologic agents are tobacco (all types) and alcoholic beverages. Herpes simplex virus, human papilloma virus, and Candida have been implicated. Host factors include poor state of dentition, nutritional aberrations, cirrhosis of liver, lichen planus, and immunologic impairmant. Cellular changes include amplification of some oncogenes, alterations in antigen expression, production of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, and disturbance of keratin and involucrin production. Experimentally, cancer is readily produced on the hamster cheek pouch and rat oral mucosa. Unlike oral cancer in humans, most experimental lesions are exophytic, and they rarely metastasize.
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PMID:Oral cancer. 212 24

A 39-year-old woman who had cryptogenic cirrhosis and who had received two liver transplants developed necrotic skin lesions over the chest, upper arms, and thighs. Biopsy showed enlarged endothelial cells with intranuclear and intracytoplasmic inclusions characteristic of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection. However, a few multinucleated gaint cells were observed beneath a necrotic epidermis. This, combined with the clinical presentation, suggested to infectious disease consultants an infection with herpes simplex virus. Using the immunoperoxidase technique, inclusions stained positively with antibody to CMV and showed a negative reaction for herpes simplex antigen. In situ hybridization using biotinylated DNA probes on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections confirmed the diagnosis of CMV infection and failed to substantiate infection with herpes simplex virus. Subsequently, blood cultures became positive for CMV. The early recognition of CMV infection in the skin permitted institution of antiviral therapy with gancyclovir. Specific skin lesions of CMV infection are likely to be encountered with increasing frequency among immunosuppressed patients. Lesions may be vesicular, and epidermal multinucleated giant cells can occasionally be identified. In situ hybridization is a technique that is readily adaptable to surgical pathology laboratories and permits both a rapid, specific diagnosis and the early institution of appropriate therapy.
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PMID:Cutaneous cytomegalovirus infection in a liver transplant patient. Diagnosis by in situ DNA hybridization. 285 Dec 72

The spectrum of liver disease in a population of 293 patients receiving 353 renal transplants (1971-1984) was reviewed. This study looked retrospectively at the histological features of liver disease in this population, and prospectively at the clinical and biochemical features of liver disease associated with renal transplantation. In all patients, infection with hepatitis B was excluded. Six deaths, primarily attributable to hepatic failure have occurred: one, acute herpes simplex infection; one, subacute massive hepatic necrosis of uncertain etiology; two, pretransplant liver disease; and two, posttransplantation cirrhosis of uncertain etiology. Review of the hepatic histology of 26 patients with known liver disease following transplantation revealed a wide range of pathologies with few specific correlations with their clinical status or biochemical tests of liver function. The prevalence of hepatic dysfunction following transplantation in our patient population was assessed by prospective biochemical screening of 111 transplant recipients over a 6-month interval. During this time period, 27 patients (24%) displayed biochemical evidence of hepatic dysfunction. Liver disease was known to have predated transplantation in only three of 27. Episodes of abnormal liver function occasionally occurred during an identifiable acute illness (six of 27), although the majority (21 of 27) had chronic hepatic dysfunction. Transplant recipients with abnormal liver function could not be differentiated from a cohort with normal liver function on the basis of age, sex, duration of graft function, or alcohol/drug intake. The possible etiologies of nonhepatitis B liver dysfunction following renal transplantation are discussed, and the high prevalence of biochemical evidence of hepatic dysfunction in this population free of hepatitis B infection is emphasized.
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PMID:Nonhepatitis B-associated liver disease in a renal transplant population. 328 52

Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are diagnosed in 10 million patients per year in the United States. The infected individuals come from all walks of life and all age groups. They may present with either genital or nongenital signs and symptoms. Most individuals are treated as outpatients, but more than a quarter of a million hospital admissions for STDs are necessary each year. These numbers will rise precipitously as the number of AIDS cases increases. More than 10,000 deaths per year are caused by STDs, primarily because of AIDS, cervical carcinoma, and hepatitis B induced cirrhosis and hepatoma. Physicians must become highly skilled in the diagnosis and treatment of the common STDs caused by herpes simplex virus, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Chlamydia trachomatis. Simple office microscopic skills are needed for the diagnosis of vaginitis, cervicitis, and urethritis, and all physicians should be encouraged to develop these skills. Physicians will need to keep abreast of the rapidly evolving changes in the diagnosis and treatment of STDs.
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PMID:The office approach to the sexually transmitted diseases: Part I. 362 20

As a major tourist attraction for heterosexuals and homosexuals, Thailand stands to experience major increases in the rate of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). This article describes 2 AIDS cases in Thailand, including the 1st documented case. The 1st case involved a 28-year-old unmarried Thai male who travelled to the US in 1981 for postgraduate work and had contact with both female prostitutes and homosexual men. In 1982-83, the patient demonstrated fever, fatigue, meningitis, and finally Pneumocystis carinii. He was hospitalized in 1984 for fever, bilateral deafness, and diarrhea. Serologic analysis revealed antibodies to human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV- III). Death occurred in January 1985. The 2nd patient was a 52-year- old single man who had moved from West Germany to Thailand 10 years previously to admission in 1985 for upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The patient, a homosexual, make frequent visits to Germany and was an alcoholic. The initial clinical diagnosis was ruptured esophageal varices with cirrhosis. The patient further had a history of herpes simplex genitalis. The subsequent course of the disease process included massive blood loss and interstitial pneumonitis. Serology revealed antibodies to HTLV-III. Death occurred in August 1985. Both of these patients belonged to groups at high risk of AIDS and had clinical, serologic, and immunologic indicators that enabled confirmation of the AIDS diagnosis.
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PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome in Thailand. A report of two cases. 372 46

Two hundred and twenty-six patients suspected of having liver disease were examined clinically, by a liver biopsy and laboratory test, according to a prospective scheme. Blood samples obtained just before the liver biopsy were coded and subsequently examined blindly, using the complement fixation test (CFT). The antigens were influenza A and B viruses, parainfluenza 1, 2, and 3, respiratory syncytial viruses, varicella, morbilli, cytomegalo and herpes simplex viruses. The sera were also examined by the CFT against Mycoplasma pneumoniae antigen. Antibodies against rubella virus were determined in a haemolysis-in-gel test. HBsAg and HBsAb were determined by a staphylococcal radioimmunoassay, and sera from patients with chronic active hepatitis (CAH) and chronic persistent hepatitis (CPH) were also examined for antibodies against hepatitis A virus by radioimmunoassay. Highly significant antibody titres against morbilli virus were found in patients with CAH and CPH. Patients with CPH or liver cirrhosis also had significantly higher titres against rubella virus than other groups. Some patients with liver granulomas had high titres against rubella virus. Only in one patient with CAH was a positive test for HBsAg found, and in one a positive test for HBsAb. Seven patients in the CAH and CPH groups had very high titres against both rubella and morbilli viruses.
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PMID:Virus antibodies in the serum of patients with liver disease. 713 37

During the last 31 months, 50 children between 3 months and 15 years of age have undergone living related liver transplantation (LRLT) for end-stage liver diseases (39 biliary atresia, 2 Budd-Chiari syndrome, 2 progressive intrahepatic cholestasis, 3 liver cirrhosis, 1 Wilson disease, 1 protoporphyria, 1 tyrosinemia, and 1 fulminant hepatitis). Combined FK-506 and low-dose steroids were routinely used for immunosuppression. There were seven deaths, two of which were related to infection (Candida pneumonia and Epstein-Barr virus [EBV]-associated lymphoproliferative syndrome [LPS]). Five patients had a bacterial infection, all of which were associated with surgical complications. Three patients had Candida infection, all of which were malnourished, had biliary atresia, and had been managed with prolonged antibiotics against obstinate ascending cholangitis. There were 14 symptomatic viral infections (1 herpes simplex virus, 1 herpes zoster virus, 5 cytomegalovirus [CMV], 6 EBV, and 1 EBV-associated LPS). Three of the five CMV infections appeared in patients whose graft was ABO-incompatible, who were managed with prophylactic OKT-3. Most of the viral infections (except 1 EBV-associated LPS) were minor and were treated successfully. The low incidence and successful treatment of CMV infection are related to the high compatibility and low incidence of allograft rejection in LRLT. Bacterial and fungal infections can be decreased by greater refinement of surgical technique and more aggressive preoperative management. Treatment of EBV infection is still an unsolved problem.
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PMID:Infectious complications in living related liver transplantation. 801 5

Herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections causing severe disease are reported frequently in patients suffering from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. This disease pattern may also be seen in an immunocompromised disease state with other causes, however, as in the case presented in this paper. An 84-year-old woman had hepatic cirrhosis resulting from chronic hepatitis C virus infection. The woman developed ulcerative lesions in and around her mouth and in the genito-anal region, and these persisted for some months. Diagnosis of HSV infection was not obtained until after extensive laboratory investigations. Aciclovir infusion therapy started immediately afterwards led to dramatic improvement of the skin and mucous membrane changes. Complete clearing of lesions was not obtained, however, because the patient died as a result of the immunosuppression.
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PMID:[Chronic mucocutaneous herpes simplex infection. Occurrence within the scope of liver-induced immunodeficiency]. 822 77


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