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)

The late complications in 25 patients more than 3 years after successful Kasai's operation for biliary atresia were presented. Nine (36%) of these 25 patients had episodes of variceal hemorrhage with portal hypertension, and biliary reobstruction in 3 (12%), bleeding from duodenal ulcer in 2, bleeding from gastric erosion in one, and diffuse pulmonary arterio-venous shunt in one were observed. Recently esophageal varices have been well controlled by endoscopic sclerotherapy, and the surgical treatment may be indicated in older children complicated with severe hypersplenism and marked splenomegaly, which are resistant for sclerotherapy. As a surgical procedure, splenectomy with periesophago-gastric devascularization (Hassab's operation) seems to be very useful for portal hypertension by biliary cirrhosis. The reoperation, hepaticoenterostomy, was performed in 3 patients with biliary reobstruction. All three patients are alive and well, and two of them are at 19 years (university student) and 24 years (married life) of age. Hepatic Rehepaticoenterostomy is well indicated rather than liver transplantation, if biliary reobstruction is incurable with conservative therapy. Many of the patients with complications were able to carry on an almost normal life, if suitable treatments for complications were taken.
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PMID:[Late complications after successful Kasai's operation for biliary atresia]. 258 18

Basic data on pathomorphology and symptomatology of the alcohol-induced liver cirrhosis accompanied by portal hypertension are discussed. Respective data were compared with the group of cirrhotic patients not abusing alcohol. A high percentage of encephalopathic disorders and nearly 50% of the patients suffering from the hemorrhage from esophageal varices were the first sign of the cirrhosis in both groups. Despite hemorrhage from esophageal varices a few patients obtained surgical help preventing recurrence of the hemorrhage. Liver functional reserve, incidence of encephalopathies and the degree of liver involvement are in favour for non-alcohol cirrhosis. Inflammatory process in the liver, splenomegaly and hypersplenism were more frequent in the liver cirrhosis of non-alcohol origin.
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PMID:[Alcohol-induced liver cirrhosis as a cause of portal hypertension]. 263 Oct 74

The purpose of this study was to clarify the effect of orthotopic liver transplantation on hypersplenism. In a 1-year period from July 1, 1986 to June 30, 1987, 196 adult patients underwent 233 orthotopic liver transplantations. Of the 58 patients with hypersplenism who were analyzed in this study, hypersplenism was more commonly associated with postnecrotic cirrhosis than other kinds of liver disease (55.3% (47/85) vs. 14.5% (11/76); p less than 0.001). Postoperative platelet counts were statistically higher than preoperative values (p less than 0.05). The latest platelet counts were more than 100,000/mm3 in 53 patients (91.4%). Of the eight patients whose preoperative and postoperative spleen volumes could be compared, all showed the reduction in the spleen size (p less than 0.02). We conclude that orthotopic liver transplantation, which is a radical surgical procedure for portal hypertension, reverses hypersplenism.
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PMID:Reversal of hypersplenism following orthotopic liver transplantation. 266 73

We present the case of a 28-year-old woman with hepatic cirrhosis, portal hypertension and hypersplenism associated with primary oligosymptomatic pulmonary hypertension, who had a survival somewhat longer than usual (10 years since she was diagnosed as pulmonary hypertension). The patient died in hepatic coma after upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The association between portal and pulmonary hypertension is rare, its true prevalence not being known and its pathogenesis being unclear. We remark the diagnostic tools and therapeutic possibilities.
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PMID:[Primary pulmonary hypertension associated with portal hypertension in a cirrhotic female patient]. 267 18

Eighteen partial splenic embolization procedures (PSEs) were performed in 17 children for hypersplenism (13) and/or esophageal variceal hemorrhage (12). The underlying disease was biliary atresia (BA) in nine children, portal vein thrombosis (PVT) in four, and biliary cirrhosis (BC) in four. From 20% to 90% of the spleen was embolized. Immediate morbidity was high, albeit minor, and the initial hospitalization was protracted for an average of 16 days. The children were followed from 4 to 81 months (average, 34.2). Four patients with BA patients subsequently had liver transplantation at an average of 20 months after PSE. In ten of 13 patients with hypersplenism, hematologic indexes returned to and remained normal throughout follow-up. The three exceptional patients (who had only 20%, 60% and 60% splenic embolization) developed recurrent mild hypersplenism, one of whom was reembolized and is free from hypersplenism 22 months later. Variceal hemorrhage was ameliorated in all 12 patients (average, 2.4 episodes of hemorrhage per year before PSE, 0.5 per year afterwards). Overwhelming postsplenectomy sepsis did not occur in an aggregate follow-up of 48.5 years. PSE is a legitimate treatment alternative for hypersplenism and for esophageal varices in children.
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PMID:Splenic embolization in children: long-term efficacy. 278 59

During the last 6 years, 205 patients with primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were admitted to our surgical departments. Thirty-eight had HCC smaller than 3 cm in diameter. There were 34 men and 4 women with an average age of 56.5 years. All patients had underlying hepatic disease: liver cirrhosis in 35 patients and chronic active hepatitis with fibrosis in the remaining 3. Pre-operative complications included: oesophageal varices in ten, cholelithiasis in five, peptic ulcer in two, gastric cancer in one, and severe hypersplenism in one instance. A radical resection was performed in 32 cases and palliative resection in 6. Simultaneous operations were carried out for the above mentioned associated conditions: distal splenorenal shunt in six, Hassab's devascularization procedure in one, splenectomy in one, cholecystectomy in four, cholecystolithotomy in one, and partial gastrectomy in one. Four patients had postoperative complications: liver failure, rebleeding, right haemothorax, and upper gastrointestinal bleeding from acute mucosal lesion of the stomach. One patient with liver failure died in coma within 1 month. The operative and in-hospital mortality rates were 2.6 and 7.9 per cent, respectively. Survival rates during the first 4 years in 32 patients with radical hepatic resection were 89.9, 67.2, 58.8, and 58.8 per cent, respectively. We suggest that hepatic resection should be the first choice of treatment for minute HCC even in the presence of liver cirrhosis.
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PMID:Appraisal of hepatic resection in the treatment of minute hepatocellular carcinoma associated with liver cirrhosis. 282

A case of hepatoma with cirrhosis for whom hepatectomy was impossible because of a severe complication is reported. The case has been treated with various treatments, so long survival has been obtained. The patient is a 56-year-old female with hepatoma with cirrhosis. The initial symptom was bleeding from esophageal varices. Her condition was not suitable for hepatectomy because of hypersplenism and remarkable hepatic disorder. Consequently, she was given endoscopic sclerotherapy for esophageal varices, partial splenic embolization for hypersplenism, and transarterial embolization with ADM, Lipiodol and Spongel powder for hepatoma. Although abdominal pain, pleural effusion and bleeding from gastric ulcer appeared after embolization, esophageal varices and hypersplenism were significantly improved; reduction of 75% of hepatoma was observed and AFP decreased from 18.7 ng to 3 ng. At 12 months after the embolization, there is no sign of hepatoma growth, rupture of esophageal varices or hypersplenism.
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PMID:[Transarterial embolization in the treatment of hepatoma complicated with cirrhosis, esophageal varices and hypersplenism]. 284 16

In normal subjects, thallium-201, administered per rectum, is taken up mainly by the liver (heart/liver ratio in normal subjects: 0.04 to 0.12). It has been claimed that an increased heart/liver ratio is suggestive of portal-caval shunting and portal hypertension. To evaluate the possibility of using thallium-201 as a test to diagnose cirrhosis, we administered this substance per rectum to 33 patients with biochemical evidence, but no clinical symptoms, of liver disease. Laparoscopy and liver biopsy revealed chronic active hepatitis without cirrhosis in 18 patients, and chronic active hepatitis with cirrhosis in the others. The results of conventional liver function tests were similar in both groups. A significant difference, however, was found between the means of fasting serum bile acid concentrations (9.8 +/- 3.2 and 18.3 +/- 4.2 microM per liter) in chronic active hepatitis without cirrhosis and cirrhotic patients, and between the means of the heart/liver ratios 20 min after thallium-201 administration (heart/liver: 0.09 +/- 0.03 and 0.54 +/- 0.13, respectively). Unlike the serum bile acid concentration which gave some overlapping values, the thallium-201 test clearly distinguished the chronic active hepatitis without cirrhosis group from the cirrhotics. In the cirrhotic group, there was a significant correlation between the heart/liver ratio and signs of portal hypertension such as esophageal varices, increased diameter of the vena porta and hypersplenism. The thallium-201 test is therefore useful in discriminating between chronic active hepatitis with and without cirrhosis in clinically asymptomatic subjects with biochemical evidence of moderate liver function impairment. A heart/liver uptake ratio much higher than normal (above 0.30) strongly suggests the development of hepatic cirrhosis.
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PMID:Thallium-201 per rectum for the diagnosis of cirrhosis in patients with asymptomatic chronic hepatitis. 274 34

Eleven cases with hypersplenism, one with liver cirrhosis and ten with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) associated with liver cirrhosis, underwent transcatheter partial splenic arterial embolization. In four of ten HCC cases, the spleen was accidentally infarcted during the procedure of transcatheter hepatic arterial embolization (TAE). The mean infarcted area of the spleen was 55.7%. An increase in the peripheral platelet count was particularly remarkable and continued over one year after the embolization. High fever and abdominal pain were observed in all cases. The fever was seen for 18.0 days and pain was noted for an average of 12.8 days after the embolization. Other adverse effects such as pleural effusion and ascites were transitorily observed. Splenic embolization is an effective supporting therapy for hypersplenism in patients with cirrhosis or HCC.
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PMID:Transcatheter partial splenic arterial embolization in patients with hypersplenism: a clinical evaluation as supporting therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma and liver cirrhosis. 301 29

A sonographic prospective study of the prevalence of gallstones was performed in 140 patients with liver cirrhosis and in 140 controls. Gallstones were found more often in cirrhotic patients (29.2%) than in controls (13.6%) (p less than 0.01). Their prevalence increased with age. The ratio of women to men in cirrhotics was the same as in the general population, with a higher prevalence in women. The prevalence of gallstones increased in decompensated liver disease. There was a significantly higher prevalence of both hypersplenism and hemolysis in cirrhosis. No difference was found in gallstone prevalence in relation to cirrhosis etiology. This prospective study confirms, by means of sonography, the high prevalence of cholelithiasis in liver cirrhosis, and extends the previous data about the lithogenic risk factors in this disease.
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PMID:Prevalence of gallstones in liver cirrhosis: a sonographic survey. 304 36


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