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)

Protein-dispersive enteropathy was noted in three children with chronic constrictive pericarditis. Increased intestinal permeability to proteins was detected by using lavelled albumin in one patient. Biopsy showed absence of mucosa lesions and normal villi in another case. Partial pericardiotomy led to rapid resolution of pseudo-cirrhosis and normalisation of serum proteins in all three cases.
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PMID:[Protein-losing enteropathy in chronic constrictive pericarditis in children]. 65 92

Symptomatic occlusion of hepatic veins, the Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS), may be on the increase in women taking oral contraceptives. 17 liver scans in 7 patients with confirmed BCS over a 7-year period were studied. 6 of the 7 patients were women. When more than 1 vein is occluded BCS results, with hepatomegaly, abdominal pain, ascites, and hepatic histology showing centrizonal sinusoidal distention, hemorrhage, and necrosis. Mortality has been high. BCS is associated with polycythemia, oral contraceptive use, malignancy, trauma, and congenital abnormalities. The scintigram appearance with radiocolloid is usually characteristic but a similar appearance has rarely been reported in cirrhosis of the liver and in 1 case of contrictive pericarditis. Excessive uptake in the midline with markedly diminished activity at the periphery may be the 1st clue that BCS is present. Confusing conditions with incomplete BCS include partial hepatectomy, radiation injury, fortuitous segmental involvement by diffuse or focal liver disease, and rarely hepatic artery occlusion. Treatment is by the porto-caval shunting operation. Venous obstruction as shown venographically has had good correlation with liver scans. After the shunt procedure, hepatic artery flow to the affected lobes has increased as the pressure falls and underperfusion of the hypertorphied midline section. After 14 months, the midline area has shown no uptake, possibly because of atrophy. Radiocolloid uptake also appears in the ribs, spine, and lung. This uptake recedes when the liver function improves.
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PMID:Liver scan in Budd-Chiari syndrome. 126 39

Pericardial constriction has emerged as an infrequent but well documented late complication of cardiac surgery. A rare case of constrictive pericarditis developed 20 years after closed mitral commissurotomy was observed. The patient had been treated for the poorly controlled ascites of unknown origin associated with crural edema and mild congestive liver cirrhosis. The long interval between the previous cardiac operation and the clinical manifestation of constriction made it difficult to establish the diagnosis. Extensive resection of the calcified pericardium through a median sternotomy with cardiopulmonary bypass standby relieved the ascites and crural edema.
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PMID:[Development of constrictive pericarditis 20 years after closed mitral commissurotomy--a case report]. 143 13

Colchicine has been used in diverse clinical settings such as gout, familial Mediterranean fever, liver cirrhosis, Behcet's disease and pericarditis. It also has an antimitotic potential hitherto unexplored due to its narrow therapeutic toxic ratio. The aim of the present study was to compare the effectiveness and the toxicity of colchicine and three analogues: thiocolchicine, 2,3 dimethyl-colchicine and 3-dimethylthiocolchicine in the blockage of amyloid synthesis in a murine model. 3-demethylthiocolchicine was equipotent to colchicine in the blockage of casein induced amyloidogenesis. However, it was markedly less toxic (LD50 11.3 mg kg-1 vs. 1.6 mg kg-1). Thiocolchicine was toxic (LD50 1.0 mg kg-1) and 2,3 didemethyl-colchicine was far less effective. The effect of 3-dimethylthiocolchicine on polymorphonuclear leukocytes was then compared to colchicine. The effect of this analogue on inhibition of chemotaxis was equivalent to that of colchicine whereas the latter was superior to the analogue in the suppression of phagocytosis (by a ratio of 2:1) and in the inhibition of bactericidal activity (by a ratio of 10:1). Since in therapeutic concentrations the only detectable effect of colchicine on PMNs is inhibition of chemotaxis, our data may point to 3-demethylthiocolchicine as an optional, perhaps superior alternative to colchicine for some of its therapeutic indications.
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PMID:Colchicine analogues: effect on amyloidogenesis in a murine model and, in vitro, on polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 145 79

The usefulness of Doppler blood flow ultrasonography in diagnosis of some liver diseases was investigated. Normal subjects and patients with AH and CPH had no blood flow signal on their abdominal wall and their femoral veins were normal. One (5%) of 20 patients with CAH was found to have blood flow signals on abdominal wall and the direction of the flow was normal, suggesting that collateral circulation has been established due to portal hypertension as a result of liver cirrhosis. 12 out of 20 cases of liver cirrhosis with no varices on abdominal wall had blood flow signals on their abdominal wall and the direction of the flow was normal. One case of Budd-Chiari syndrome with occlusion of hepatic vein and inferior vena cava showed blood flow signal on his abdominal wall and the direction of the flow was abnormal. One case of constrictive pericarditis showed abnormal blood flow in the femoral veins. In conclusion, this method is highly useful for the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of portal hypertension of cirrhosis and Budd-Chiari syndrome. It is also of help for the diagnosis of pericarditis and some other vascular deformity.
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PMID:[Usefulness of Doppler blood flow ultrasonography in diagnosis of liver diseases]. 183 17

This work reviews the most frequent late effects seen in long-term survivors and how they relate to individual therapeutic modalities: a) Growth: severe growth retardation is seen in patients treated by radiation therapy, related to dose, anatomical site and age of patient, along with bony abnormalities (scoliosis, atrophy or hypoplasia, osteoporosis). b) Fertility: chemotherapy, in particular alkylating agents and the methylhydrazine procarbazine, can interfere with gonadal function, especially when administered with abdomen and pelvic irradiation. This effect is often seen in Hodgkin disease. c) Cardiovascular function: the anthracyclines cardiotoxicity is well known and most commonly presents with cardiomyopathy, pericarditis or both. d) Pulmonary function: pulmonary fibrosis and recurring pneumonitis are the most common effects when more than a total dose 3000 cGy has been delivered to more than 50% of the lung. Chemotherapeutic agents (bleomycin, busulfan and many others) appear to be dose-related responsible for pulmonary disease in long-term survivors. e) Gastrointestinal function: fibrosis and enteritis are the most common pathologic abnormalities of the gastrointestinal tract, particularly after radiation therapy. The hepatotoxicity of anticancer therapy is well known: fibrosis-cirrhosis is seen after radiation therapy when a total dose between 1200 and 5800 cGy is administered, but abnormal liver function is also found after chemotherapy, being methotrexate implicated as cause of chronic hepatopathy. f) Urinary tract: hemorrhagic cystitis has been associated with cyclophosphamide and iphosfamide, but today this complication has been reduced by the use of prophylactic measures such as vigorous hydration and diuresis. Radiation in dose exceeding 2000 cGy is a well-defined cause of renal failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Late data in pediatric oncology]. 207 95

Chylous ascites, a milky, high triglyceride fluid is usually found in patients with lymphatic obstruction from malignancy. We describe a patient with cirrhosis who developed constrictive pericarditis and chylous ascites. Long-standing portal hypertension compounded by elevated central venous pressure provided several pathophysiologic contributions to the formation of the chylous ascites. Chylous ascites even in a cirrhotic requires prompt assessment for conditions leading to elevated central venous pressure.
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PMID:Chylous ascites should suggest constrictive pericarditis even in a patient with cirrhosis. 223 3

Chylous ascites is a well-documented sequelae of traumatic rupture of the thoracic duct and mechanical obstruction of the lymphatic system due to neoplastic, inflammatory, or congenital anomalies. Less commonly, chylous ascites results from altered hemodynamics and lymphatic flow, as seen in cirrhosis and constrictive pericarditis. Rarely, severe right-sided heart failure from a variety of causes has also resulted in chylous ascites or a protein-losing enteropathy. We report a case of chylous ascites due to dilated cardiomyopathy with autopsy findings. The pathophysiology of chylous ascites formation in right heart failure will be discussed, with a review of the literature.
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PMID:Dilated cardiomyopathy associated with chylous ascites. 259 59

A 34 year old patient was diagnosed as suffering from congestive cirrhosis due to constrictive pericarditis 18 years ago. A terminal dystrophic episode of additionally acquired chronic aggressive hepatitis B led to rapidly progressive liver failure. Orthotopic liver transplantation was carried out. 10 months after transplantation the patient is alive and well. Presence of HBsAg and HBcAg can again be demonstrated in the liver graft, however, without histologic evidence of hepatitis. Problems of prognosis after liver transplantation for hepatitis B virus infection are discussed.
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PMID:[Hepatitis B in established cardiac cirrhosis--a rare indication for liver transplantation]. 261 53

Thirty cases of Listeria monocytogenes septicaemia occurred in Denmark between 1981 and 1986. The aim of this study was to consider the treatment of these patients, 18 males and 12 females aged from 20 to 87 years: average (AV) 65 years. One or more predisposing factors (PF) were found in 90% of the patients, mainly cancer (16), steroid treatment (12), cirrhosis and/or alcoholism (8), and diabetes mellitus (3). Follow-up varied from 3 months to 5 years. Ampicillin (AMP) alone or with an aminoglycoside (AMI) was the treatment in 9 and 16 cases, respectively. One patient was successfully treated with penicillin G and another received oral co-trimoxazol after recovered with carbenicillin plus AMI. AMP doses were lower than used in listerial meningitis (AV 5 g/day vs. 16 g/day), and the duration was variable: from one to 21 days (AV 8 days). The mortality rate was 50%. No significant differences between survivors and non-survivors were observed either in the antibiotic treatment (doses, duration, administration, and use of AMI), or the number and kind of PF found. The cause of septicaemia could not be established in most cases but 3 endocarditis, 2 perianal abscesses and one pericarditis were found in the non-survivors. Pulmonary involvement was present in 13 patients and CNS infection suspected in 10. Early diagnosis, adequate doses and duration of antibiotic treatment, and the use of drugs capable to penetrate purulent collections (microabscess and abscess formations) should improve the prognosis of L. monocytogenes septicaemia.
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PMID:The treatment of Listeria monocytogenes septicaemia. 263 5


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