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

Exercise limitation in cirrhosis is typically attributed to a cirrhotic myopathy (without impaired oxygen utilization) and/or a cardiac chronotropic dysfunction. We performed symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise testing in 19 cirrhotics without confounding variables (cardiopulmonary disease, beta blockade, anemia, smoking). Twelve concurrently exercised patients without cirrhosis and with normal resting pulmonary function were controls. Oxygen consumption (VO2) at peak exercise, at anaerobic threshold (VO2-AT), work rate (WR), and heart rate (HR) were measured. Cirrhotics had significantly lower peak WR (73+/-4 vs 107+/-7% predicted, p < 0.001), VO2 (72+/-4 vs 98+/-5% predicted, P < 0.001), VO2-AT (53+/-4 vs 71+/-5% predicted peak VO2, P < 0.01), HR (83+/-2 vs 91+/-2% predicted, P < 0.01) and were more likely to have chronotropic dysfunction (peak HR < 85% predicted). Six cirrhotics had normal aerobic capacity (peak VO2 > 80% predicted), while 13 were abnormal. The abnormals had an earlier AT (46+/-2 vs 67+/-3% predicted peak VO2, P < 0.05) but no difference in peak HR percent predicted was found. In conclusion, two thirds of cirrhotics, without confounding factors, have significantly reduced aerobic capacity. Cirrhotic myopathy (without impaired O2 utilization) and cardiac chronotropic dysfunction do not adequately account for the observed decrease in aerobic capacity.
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PMID:Analysis of impaired exercise capacity in patients with cirrhosis. 972 56

Hepatic hydrothorax is defined as a pleural effusion in a patient with cirrhosis of the liver and no cardiopulmonary disease. The estimated prevalence of this often debilitating complication in patients with liver cirrhosis is 4% to 10%. Its pathophysiology involves movement of ascitic fluid from the peritoneal cavity into the pleural space through diaphragmatic defects. As a result patients are at increased risk of respiratory infection. Initial management consists of sodium restriction, diuretics, and thoracentesis. A transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt may be required. Because most patients with hepatic hydrothorax have end-stage liver disease, a liver transplant should be considered if these options fail.
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PMID:Hepatic hydrothorax: pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management. 1049 20

A 27-year-old Indian woman at 23 weeks' gestation presented with decompensated liver cirrhosis, coagulopathy, restrictive lung disease with cor pulmonale and preeclampsia. She was diagnosed to have sea-blue histiocyte syndrome (SBHS) at the age of 13 years and was treated conservatively. There was worsening liver, respiratory and bone marrow function as the pregnancy progressed. She underwent a successful pregnancy despite her poor medical condition and advanced disease state. We described the first case of familial SBHS in a pregnant patient from Asia.
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PMID:Successful pregnancy in a patient with familial sea-blue histiocyte syndrome. 1122 Nov 66

A hepatic hydrothorax is a pleural effusion that develops in a patient with cirrhosis and portal hypertension in the absence of cardiopulmonary disease. The pleural effusion is derived from ascitic fluid that enters the chest because of the negative pressure within the pleural space via defects in the diaphragm. The peritoneal-to-pleural flow of fluid can be demonstrated by nuclear scanning, even when the ascites is not clinically apparent. The pleural fluid usually has the characteristics of a transudate. However, an occasional patient with hepatic hydrothorax will develop spontaneous bacterial pleuritis manifest by increased pleural fluid neutrophils or a positive bacterial culture and will require antibiotic therapy. Treatment of the hydrothorax is directed at the underlying liver disease but a dyspneic patient can obtain relief from a thoracentesis or paracentesis. When medical therapy fails, liver transplantation is the treatment of choice. Both transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunting and thoracoscopic repair of diaphragmatic defects with pleural sclerosis can provide symptomatic relief, but the morbidity and mortality of these procedures are high because of the fragile nature of the patients.
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PMID:Hepatic hydrothorax. 1280 37

The majority of cirrhotic patients present dyspnea, but most of the time this is a consequence of ascites, hepatic hydrothorax or cardiopulmonary disease. Very few of these patients undergo the hepatopulmonary syndrome, an infrequent complication of chronic liver disease, especially when associated with portal hypertension and cirrhosis. Hepatopulmonary syndrome is characterised by dyspnea and, consequently, arterial hypoxemia, due to intrapulmonary vasodilation and shunting. The real pathogenesis of this vasodilation is still unknown, although many hypotheses have been suggested. Furthermore, no medical therapy appears to be really useful in the treatment of hepatopulmonary syndrome. At the present time, the only treatment that is efficacious for the resolution, or for the improvement of blood gas oxygenation abnormalities, is orthotopic liver transplantation.
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PMID:Hepatopulmonary syndrome. A review of the literature. 1285 33

Patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension often have abnormal extracellular fluid volume regulation, resulting in accumulation of fluid as ascites, oedema or pleural effusion. These complications carry a poor prognosis with nearly half of the patients with ascites dying in the ensuing 2-3 years. In contrast to what happens in the abdominal cavity where large amounts of fluid (5-8 L) accumulate with the patient only experiencing only mild symptoms, in the thoracic cavity smaller amounts of fluid (1-2 L) cause severe symptoms such as shortness of breath, cough and hypoxaemia. Hepatic hydrothorax is defined as a pleural effusion, usually >500 mL, in patients with cirrhosis without cardiopulmonary disease. The pathophysiology involves the direct movement of ascitic fluid from the peritoneal cavity into the pleural space through diaphragmatic defects. The estimated prevalence among cirrhotic patients is 5-10%. The effusion, which is a transudate, most commonly occurs in the right hemithorax. The mainstay of therapy is similar to that of portal hypertensive ascites and includes sodium restriction and administration of diuretics. Refractory hydrothorax can be managed with transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt in selected cases. Pleurodesis is not routinely recommended. Suitable patients with hepatic hydrothorax should be considered candidates for liver transplantation.
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PMID:Review article: hepatic hydrothorax. 1527 63

Hepatic hydrothorax is defined as pleural effusion with liver cirrhosis but no primary cardiopulmonary disease. Hepatic hydrothorax is often resistant to various therapeutic interventions. The most likely cause is the transfer of ascites fluid from the abdomen to the pleural space via the diaphragm because of a negative intrathoracic pressure gradient. A 62-year-old man was diagnosed with hepatoma and cirrhosis. After a partial hepatectomy, he suffered with hepatic hydrothorax. He had snoring without obvious sleep apnea. The patient's hepatic hydrothorax markedly improved following nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) treatment during sleep. The mechanism for the improvement may have been the intrathoracic positive pressure during sleep induced by the nCPAP treatment during sleep. nCPAP treatment may provide a new therapy for resistant hepatic hydrothorax.
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PMID:Resistant hepatic hydrothorax: a successful case with treatment by nCPAP. 1573 99

Hepatic hydrothorax was diagnosed in four patients with liver cirrhosis, three men aged 65, 41, and 48 and a woman aged 48. They presented with either right-sided or bilateral pleural-fluid accumulations in the absence of cardiopulmonary disease. In the first man with no concurrent ascites, the disorder was missed, resulting in prolonged chest tube drainage, multiple severe complications and death. In the 41-year-old man chest tube drainage was also associated with complications including renal failure and encephalopathy. Pleurodesis was effective in the woman while in the remaining man hepatic hydrothorax was only a temporary, asymptomatic finding. Pleural effusions in cirrhotic patients should be considered and managed as hepatic hydrothorax unless diagnostic studies reveal a different aetiology. Absence of ascites is not uncommon and should not delay the correct diagnosis. The gradient between pleural and serum albumin concentration is typically more than 11 g/l. Prolonged chest tube drainage is dangerous and should be avoided. In cases refractory to salt restriction and diuretic therapy, transjugular introduction of an intrahepatic portosystemic shunt is the treatment of choice. Recently, pleurodesis combined with thoracoscopic repair ofdiaphragmatic defects has been reported as a potentially effective form of therapy.
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PMID:[Hepatic hydrothorax]. 1692 51

The paper describes one case of the mixed form of mucoviscidosis, with involvement of the lung (chronic obstructive bronchitis, bronchiectasis, emphysema, pneumosclerosis), liver (cirrhosis), pancreas (lipomatosis with islet atrophy), ileum (enteritis). There were the following complications: cor pulmonale, esophageal varicose veins, ascitis, splenomegaly, secondary diffuse renal amyloidosis of the kidney, adrenals, and spleen, and brain edema. Due to modern therapy the patient reached the age of 25 years, which is a rarity.
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PMID:[Pathomorphology of the mixed form of mycoviscidosis in an adult patient]. 1683 Jun 24

The natural course of patients with cirrhosis is frequently complicated by the accumulation of fluid in the peritoneal or pleural cavities and interstitial tissue. Functional renal abnormalities that occur as a consequence of decreased effective arterial blood volume are responsible for fluid accumulation in the form of ascites and hepatic hydrothorax. Ascites is the most common complication of cirrhosis and poses an increased risk for infections, renal failure and mortality. Patients have a poor prognosis and it is estimated that nearly half will die in approximately 2 years without liver transplantation. Hepatic hydrothorax is defined as a pleural effusion greater than 500 mL (mostly right-sided) in patients with cirrhosis without cardiopulmonary disease; the estimated prevalence is approximately 5-10%. Liver transplantation is the most definitive cure for both conditions in those patients that are suitable candidates. However, the mainstay of therapy for minimizing fluid accumulation in both conditions includes sodium restriction and administration of diuretics. This article reviews the most current concepts of pathogenesis, clinical findings, diagnosis, and treatment of these complications of cirrhosis.
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PMID:Management of ascites and hepatic hydrothorax. 1722 97


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