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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Musculoskeletal disease occurs in association with inflammatory bowel disorders including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, as well as with
Whipple's disease
; with enteritis caused by Salmonella, Shigella, and Yersinia; and also following intestinal bypass surgery. Extraintestinal causes of musculoskeletal alterations include Laennec's and biliary
cirrhosis
and pancreatitis. Three types of musculoskeletal abnormalities are recognized in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases: peripheral joint arthritis, sacroiliitis and spondylitis identical to ankylosing spondylitis, and rarely, miscellaneous changes such as digital clubbing and hypertrophic osteoarthropathy.
...
PMID:Enteropathic arthropathies. 243 70
A case report is given of a man, who died at the age of 56. At post mortem examination the following was found: Postnecrotic cirrhosis of the liver, esophageal varicosis, ascites as well as multiple white nodes located in the serosal layer of the small intestine and the mesenterium. Histological examination showed fibromatosis. Differential diagnosis is discussed including other connective tissue tumors,
Whipple's disease
, peritoneal tuberculosis, Gardner syndrome, solitary fibromatosis, diffuse peritoneal fibromatosis and sclerosing peritonitis. Similarity of the findings reported with the disease entity of sclerosing mesenteritis is discussed as well as a possible causal relationship between
liver cirrhosis
and fibromatosis.
...
PMID:[Disseminated fibromatosis of the mesenterium]. 399 May 1
There is dispute about the cause of Beethoven's death; alcoholic cirrhosis, syphilis, infectious hepatitis, lead poisoning, sarcoidosis and
Whipple's disease
have all been proposed. In this article all primary source documents related to Beethoven's terminal illness and death are reviewed. The documents include his letters, the report of his physician Andreas Wawruch, his Conversation Books, the autopsy report, and a new toxicological report of his hair. His terminal illness was characterised by jaundice, ascites, ankle oedema and abdominal pain. The autopsy data indicate that Beethoven had
cirrhosis of the liver
, and probably also renal papillary necrosis, pancreatitis and possibly diabetes mellitus. His lifestyle for at least the final decade of his life indicated that he overindulged in alcohol in the form of wine. Alcohol was by far the most common cause of
cirrhosis
at that period. Toxicological analysis of his hair showed that the level of lead was elevated. During the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, lead was added illegally to inexpensive wines to sweeten and refresh them. These findings strongly suggest that liver failure secondary to alcoholic cirrhosis, associated with terminal spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, was the cause of death. This was complicated in the end stages by renal failure. If the presence of endogenous lead was verified by analysis of Beethoven's skeletal remains, it would suggest that the lead was derived from wine that he drank. Lead poisoning may account for some of his end-of-life symptoms. There is little clinical or autopsy evidence that Beethoven suffered from syphilis.
...
PMID:Beethoven's terminal illness and death. 1721 30
The paper describes a patient who has developed
Whipple's disease
in the presence of infantile cerebral palsy and hepatitis B virus
cirrhosis
. After 5-year treatment with co-trimoxazole (480 mg b.i.d.), the clinical manifestations subsided and PAS-positive macrophages were no longer detectable in the small intestinal mucosal biopsy specimens. Subsequent worsening of the patient's condition was associated with the progression of
liver cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:[Whipple's disease in a patient with infantile cerebral palsy and hepatitis B virus cirrhosis]. 2477 11