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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Theophylline and its derivatives, such as aminophylline, have an established role as bronchodilators, although their mode of action in man is not clear. There is circumstantial evidence that therapeutic doses of theophylline may have a phosphodiesterase inhibiting effect, thus potentiating the effects of cyclic AMP. However, it remains to be established whether this is the primary mode of action of theophylline at the biochemical level. The pathways of theophylline metabolism have been clarified, although most of the enzymes involved have not been characterized. Hepatic microsomal enzyme induction by polycyclic hydrocarbons will increase the rate of theophylline elimination. There are a number of factors which influence theophylline clearance in adults, which is known to be highly variable. These factors include obesity, smoking habit, diet and the presence of such diseases as
hepatic cirrhosis
, acute pulmonary oedema,
cor pulmonale
and viral respiratory infection. There is a good correlation between plasma theophylline level and bronchodilator effect. This can be demonstrated at plasma levels as low as 5 microgram/ml, although optimal levels are usually greater than 10 microgram/ml. Unacceptable toxicity usually occurs in association with plasma levels greater than 20 microgram/ml. The maintenance of adequate plasma theophylline levels by the use of a sustained-release aminophylline tablet is discussed.
...
PMID:Theophylline: biochemical pharmacology and pharmacokinetics. 22 Jan 19
Regional pulmonary function studies using 133xenon gas, spirometry, and arterial blood gas levels were performed before and 1 to 47 months after pneumonectomy for bronchogenic carcinoma in 27 patients. The mean loss in forced vital capacity was more after right pneumonectomy (44.9 percent of preoperative value) than after left lung resection (41.4 percent). There was no significant change in regional pulmonary function distribution within the remaining lung in 24 patients. Two patients developed significant changes in regional pulmonary blood flow; one had
hepatic cirrhosis
, and the other sustained a myocardial infarction after pneumonectomy. The third patient with significant apical hyperperfusion before pneumonectomy gradually developed abnormal distribution of ventilation concomitant with electrocardiographic evidence of
cor pulmonale
within two years after pneumonectomy. The mean ventilation of the apical zones was significantly lower than the mean of 14 healthy subjects. This finding and the higher incidence of ventilatory defects were related to old age and heavy smoking. Seven patients with marked reduction of pulmonary blood flow to the tumor-bearing lung (9 to 33 percent of cardiac output) had technically successful pneumonectomy. A formula and nomogram were developed to estimate the prognostically significant forced expiratory volume in one second after pneumonectomy from the preoperative studies.
...
PMID:Regional pulmonary function before and after pneumonectomy using 133xenon. 115 32
Evaluation of the surgical risk in cirrhotic patients undergoing emergency operations must take into account potential anesthesia-related problems, the specific type of operation, and altered liver function. Therefore, (a) the generic surgical risk, (b) the specific surgical risk and (c) the anesthetic risk, must be distinguished. The factors which affect the generic risk are the conditions which can worsen pre-existing liver failure (e.g.
cardiopulmonary disease
, area of surgical intervention, stage of
liver cirrhosis
). Splanchnic reflexes as well as lower venous return to the heart are the potential factors which may lead to reduced hepatic blood perfusion and, therefore, represent the specific surgical risk. The anesthetic risk is due to negative interference with the splanchnic circulation by both artificial ventilation and direct pharmacologic vasoconstrictor effects. Finally, the possibility that the patient is positive for HBV or HIV markers must be considered in order to carry out the necessary measures to avoid direct contact with the blood.
...
PMID:[Surgical risks for cirrhotic patients]. 224 63
In patients with anasarca, the relative importance of cardiac, pulmonary and/or hepatic dysfunction is often difficult to determine. Conventional use of the Swan-Ganz catheter helps to separate the contributions of right and left heart disease, but it is seldom used to evaluate liver dysfunction. This report describes passage of a Swan-Ganz catheter into the hepatic vein prior to pulmonary artery placement in 11 patients. Hepatic vein catheterization permitted wedged hepatic venography using contrast media and measurement of the wedged and free hepatic venous pressures. All 11 patients had pulmonary hypertension; three had
cor pulmonale
only, and the others had combinations of left and right heart failure. In addition, six patients had either a cirrhotic pattern on venography, or portal hypertension. Only three of these six patients had previous clinical evidence of liver disease. This study does not prove that identification of hepatic dysfunction by this method improves the outcome in such patients. However, this low risk modification of standard pulmonary artery catheterization provides additional information which is clinically useful in searching for and avoiding complications of
cirrhosis
, as well as offering a clearer understanding of pathophysiology in acute multisystem disease.
...
PMID:Use of hepatic vein catheterization in the evaluation of patients with anasarca. 232 66
The value of ascitic fluid adenosine deaminase activity in distinguishing tuberculosis from other causes of ascites was examined in a retrospective study of 41 patients with bacteriologically confirmed tuberculous peritonitis and 41 control patients, matched for age and sex, with ascites of other causes (12 alcoholic cirrhosis, 5 cryptogenic
cirrhosis
, 12 malignant disorders, 3 pancreatitis, and 9 miscellaneous causes). The mean ascites adenosine deaminase activity was 99.8 (SD 49.1) in tuberculous patients and 14.8 (8.4) U/l in control patients (p less than 0.0001). A cutoff of 32.3 U/l had a sensitivity of 95% and specificity of 98% in distinguishing between the two groups. In a subsequent prospective study of 64 patients with ascites, 11 were found to have tuberculosis. Of the others, 23 had
cirrhosis
(18 alcoholic, 5 cryptogenic), 17 malignant disorders, 3 pancreatitis, 5
cor pulmonale
, 3 congestive cardiac failure, 1 systemic mastocytosis, and 1 renal failure and hypothyroidism. The mean ascites adenosine deaminase activity was 112.6 (45.0) U/l in the patients with tuberculous ascites and 16.3 (36.7) U/l (p less than 0.0001) in those with ascites of other causes. In this study, adenosine deaminase had a sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 96% in discriminating tuberculosis from other causes of ascites. These findings suggest that the ascitic fluid adenosine deaminase activity may be used to identify patients in whom the diagnosis of abdominal tuberculosis must be pursued.
...
PMID:Diagnostic value of ascites adenosine deaminase in tuberculous peritonitis. 256 65
The results of the clinical observations over 127 patients with mucoviscidosis and chronic (primary and secondary) pneumonia are presented. The children were aged from 1 to 15 years. Study of the plasma and platelet links of hemostasis permitted one to reveal considerable disorders seen during exacerbation in all the groups. The intensity of the disorders correlated well with the gravity of the patient's condition and with the bronchopulmonary process spreading as well as with the presence of complications on the part of the cardiovascular system (
cor pulmonale
) and the hepatobiliary system (
liver cirrhosis
). The chronic form of the disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) syndrome was diagnosed in 50 percent of the patients with mucoviscidosis, in 1/3 of the patients with secondary and in 18 percent of the patients with primary chronic pneumonia. The subacute form of the DIC syndrome was diagnosed in 15 percent of the patients with mucoviscidosis and in 4.5 percent of the patients with secondary chronic pneumonia. The multimodality treatment without heparin made it possible to correct the hemostatic disturbances in the majority of the patients under observation. In some children with mucoviscidosis and secondary chronic pneumonia, the use of heparin in the form of intravenous injections or ultrasonic inhalations permitted making such a correction more rapidly and more completely.
...
PMID:[Clinical significance of disorders of hemostasis in children with chronic pneumonia and mucoviscidosis]. 272 62
Contemporary theories of oedema formation are often based on the idea that "effective" blood volume is reduced, and that sodium retention and oedema are a result of the kidney responding, as in haemorrhage, to a perception by receptors in the circulation that blood volume is inadequate. This idea has enhanced understanding of the pathophysiology of such conditions as cardiac failure and
cirrhosis
, but has obscured the fact that blood volume is almost always increased in oedematous states. Evidence is presented that an increase in renal venous pressure can cause sodium retention by a direct action on the kidney: a rise in venous pressure could thereby initiate a vicious circle by causing sodium retention, expansion of plasma volume, and further increase in venous pressure. This sequence of events may be crucial in the pathophysiology of
cor pulmonale
, and an exacerbating factor in other oedematous states.
...
PMID:Raised venous pressure: a direct cause of renal sodium retention in oedema? 289 77
13 patients with severe lung disease and
cor pulmonale
from cystic fibrosis were accepted for heart-lung transplantation (HLT). 6 have had the operation, of whom 5 are well, with normal lung function, 3-29 months after operation. 1 patient died from adult respiratory distress syndrome after reoperation to control persistent chest-wall bleeding: at necropsy, this patient proved to have
cirrhosis
. Respiratory tract infections and acute lung rejection after HLT for cystic fibrosis were no more common than in other HLT patients. Of the 7 patients for whom suitable donor organs were not found, 3 died within 3 months of assessment. Initial severity of disease had been similar to that in the transplant group. The cost of assessment, operation, and 1 year's treatment after HLT is similar to that of medical treatment for such patients.
...
PMID:Heart-lung transplantation for cystic fibrosis. 289 64
Theophylline plasma levels and FEV1 were measured in patients affected by chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and a concomitant disease state (congestive heart failure, chronic
cor pulmonale
, obesity, peptic disease,
hepatic cirrhosis
, chronic renal failure) and treated with a sustained release theophylline preparation. Our results indicate that, only in patients affected by congestive heart failure and chronic
cor pulmonale
, is there a decreased plasma clearance of the drug. Low levels of plasma theophylline were measured in obese patients probably because they received an inadequate posology.
...
PMID:Effect of various disease states on theophylline plasma levels and on pulmonary function in patients with chronic airway obstruction treated with a sustained release theophylline preparation. 330 82
One-hundred-forty postmortem liver specimens from patients with cardiac disease or pre-terminal hypotensive shock were examined in order to characterize the histopathologic features of ischemic and congestive hepatic disease. The study group included patients with arteriosclerotic, valvular or hypertensive heart disease, primary pulmonary disease with
cor pulmonale
, myocarditis, cardiomyopathy, and shock. The hepatic lesions included centrilobular congestion alone (10%), congestion with necrosis (77%), centrilobular necrosis with inflammatory reaction (neutrophil or mononuclear cell) (27%), cardiac sclerosis (48%) and regenerative hyperplasia (23%). Cardiac sclerosis, the most common form of hepatic fibrosis seen, consisted of eccentric thickening or occlusion of the walls of central veins and perivenular scars extending into the lobular parenchyma. Regeneration of liver cells was manifested by either liver-cell plate thickening within a retained cord-like framework or by nodular masses of hepatocytes (nodular regenerative hyperplasia). Only one case of developing
cirrhosis
was identified in this series. The morphologic features outlined in this study should provide a useful basis for the classification of liver injury in cardiac disease and shock.
...
PMID:Morphologic features of hepatic injury in cardiac disease and shock. 372 87
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