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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The prevalence of
gastric ulcer
and its relationship to the severity of
cirrhosis
and degree of portal hypertension was evaluated in 245 cirrhotic patients, and compared with 245 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects. Portal and systemic haemodynamic studies were performed in cirrhotic patients. The prevalence of
gastric ulcer
in cirrhotic patients was 20.8%, which was significantly higher than the 4.0% found in healthy controls. Using a multivariate logistic regression model, the hepatic venous pressure gradient was found to be the only predictor of the prevalence of
gastric ulcer
in cirrhotic patients to present with
gastric ulcer
. The hepatic venous pressure gradient was significantly higher in cirrhotic patients with
gastric ulcer
than in those without (17.3 +/- 4.4 vs 15.5 +/- 5.0 mmHg, P = 0.01). Other variables, including sex, smoking, cardiac output and severity or aetiology of
cirrhosis
did not show significant differences between the two patient groups. The prevalence of
gastric ulcer
in cirrhotic patients whose hepatic venous pressure gradient was below 12 mmHg (4.5%) was similar to that observed in the healthy controls (4.0%). However, when the hepatic venous pressure gradient was > 12 mmHg, the prevalence of
gastric ulcer
(24.4%) was significantly higher than that in control subjects. However, the incidence of
gastric ulcer
was not related to the degree of portal hypertension. In conclusion, the prevalence of
gastric ulcer
in cirrhotic patients was found to be significantly higher than in the age- and sex-matched healthy subjects. Portal hypertension with a hepatic venous pressure gradient > 12 mmHg may be an important factor contributing to the increased prevalence of
gastric ulcer
observed in patients with
liver cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Prevalence of gastric ulcer in cirrhotic patients and its relation to portal hypertension. 867 43
The fluorescence spectroscopy of porphyrin molecule in blood was determined with photoluminescence fluorescence spectroscope in 139 patients with gastric carcinoma, 76 with hepatic carcinoma, 110 with
gastric ulcer
and chronic gastritis, 168 with
liver cirrhosis
and 33 normals as controls. The results showed that the peaks of Zinc porphyrin and protoporphyrin in patients with cancer were significantly higher than those in patients with benign disease, the peak of protoporphyrin being two to three times higher in the former groups of patients than that in the latter (P < 0.01). Protoporphyrin could be used as a marker to screen and diagnose gastric and hepatic carcinoma.
...
PMID:[Changes in hematoporphyrin in patients with gastric and hepatic carcinoma and their clinical significance]. 873 9
There is a higher prevalence of peptic ulcer disease in cirrhotic patients than in the general population. Whether Helicobacter pylori is a risk factor for peptic ulcer in
cirrhosis
remains controversial. The aim of this study was to determine whether there is a significant correlation between H.pylori infection and peptic ulcer in
liver cirrhosis
. In a cross-sectional study, 49 cirrhotic patients underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and 75 controls (health examinees) without liver disease were also examined by endoscopy. The presence of H. pylori was assessed by culture, histologic findings and rapid urease test of gastric antrum biopsy specimens. Thirty of the 49 (61%) cirrhotic patients had peptic ulcers as compared to 24 of the 75 (32%) controls. The frequency of H. pylori in the antrum in the cirrhotic group was significantly lower than in the control group (39% vs 69%). The presence of H. pylori was more frequent in control patients with gastric (75%) and duodenal ulcers (95%) than nonulcer control patients (59%) whereas the difference between patients with peptic ulcer and nonulcer (40% vs 37%) was not significant in cirrhotic patients. H. pylori was identified in 40% of the cirrhotic patients with duodenal ulcers compared with 95% of controls with duodenal ulcers (p < 0.05). Nevertheless, this difference was not significant among patients with a
gastric ulcer
between the two groups (40% vs 75%). There was no significant difference in the frequency of H. pylori infection among nonulcer patients between the cirrhotic and control groups (37% vs 59%). In conclusion, we found no evidence to substantiate an etiologic role of H. pylori in the development of a duodenal ulcer in cirrhotic patients.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection and risk of peptic ulcer among cirrhotic patients. 903 84
The incidence of various forms of
stomach ulcer
, their combination with liver diseases and pathogenetic relationships of these two pathological types have been studied on the material of 6456 autopsy cases for 1983-1992. High incidence of nonspecific reactive hepatitis in both gastric and duodenal ulcer and that of
liver cirrhosis
and
cirrhosis
-carcinoma in the pyloro-duodenal ulcer is established. A role of gastrin as a promoter in the development of
liver cirrhosis
and carcinoma in pyloroduodenal ulcer is suggested. The role of nonspecific reactive hepatitis in chronization of the hepatic pathological process is not excluded.
...
PMID:[Peptic ulcer and liver pathology (an analysis of 6456 autopsy observations during 1983-1992)]. 913 91
Gastric mucosal abnormalities resulting from portal hypertension are defined as "congestive gastropathy". A case of congestive gastropathy with unusual features, in a 63 year old man with a history of excessive alcohol intake and
cirrhosis
, is described. The patient underwent a subtotal gastrectomy because of profuse bleeding from a
gastric ulcer
, providing a large surgical specimen for examination. Unusual gross and histological findings included prominent arterial intimal hyperplasia, and diffuse duplication and focal fragmentation of the internal lamina elastica. The differential diagnosis of this condition includes primary angiodysplastic gastropathy such as Dieulafoy's disease. The similarity with Dieulafoy-like angiodysplasia emphasises that clear cut criteria to define gastric vascular lesions do not yet exist.
...
PMID:Late stage congestive gastropathy. 921 56
The prevalence of gastric ulcers in patients with
liver cirrhosis
is increased compared with that in the general population, and portal hypertension may contribute to the increased risk of
gastric ulcer
in
cirrhosis
patients. Aggressive factors involved in the pathogenesis of
gastric ulcer
are diminished in association with portal hypertension. In contrast, most of the important gastric mucosal defense mechanisms are shown to be impaired in portal hypertension; many of these mechanisms are also found to be altered in patients with
liver cirrhosis
. Portal hypotensive treatment with propranolol reduces ethanol-induced gastric mucosal damage in portal hypertensive rats and improves endoscopic signs of portal hypertensive gastropathy in
cirrhosis
patients. Together, these findings suggest portal hypertension-induced impairment of the gastric mucosal defenses to be an important factor in the pathogenesis of
gastric ulcer
in patients with
liver cirrhosis
. Prospective studies of portal pressure-reducing procedures, such as pharmacotherapy with propranolol, and their effect on the incidence of
gastric ulcer
in
cirrhosis
patients are needed to confirm this suggestion.
...
PMID:Does portal hypertension contribute to the pathogenesis of gastric ulcer associated with liver cirrhosis? 1068 Jun 61
A 66-year-old woman had had recurrent episodes of disturbed consciousness whenever she had been constipated or dehydrated. She had been inactive and afflicted with obstinate constipation since she had menopause at age of 32. She underwent gastrectomy for
gastric ulcer
at age of 37. Laboratory examination showed marked hyperammonemia, reduction in Fisher ratio, and poor excretion of ICG. Furthermore, hypopituitarism and secondary hypothyroidism were found. She was diagnosed as Sheehan's syndrome. A T1-weighted MRI demonstrated symmetrical high intensity in the bilateral globus pallidus and empty sella. The histological examination of the liver revealed a mild lymphocytic infiltration without
liver cirrhosis
. Abdominal angiography showed a large shunt vessel between the splenic vein and the left renal vein. After embolization of the shunt vessel, hyperammonemia and neurological impairment improved. Additionally multiple hormones replacement has been useful to reduce the drugs of standard therapy for hepatic coma. In this case, we speculated that Sheehan's syndrome accelerated the constipation and worsened the shunt encephalopathy.
...
PMID:[A case of portal-systemic encephalopathy associated with Sheehan's syndrome]. 1083 32
Functional and morphological alterations of microvascular endothelial cells (ECs) would lead to microcirculatory disturbances, thereby providing a basis for the development of a disease state. Clinically endotoxemia frequently encountered in a variety of diseases is considered to be a trigger to develop the microcirculatory disorders such as disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and multiple organ failure (MOF), both of which feature the end stage of severe systemic disease. Experimentally intravital microscopy reveals that continuous venous infusion of endotoxin (LPS) causes a low flow state in the rat mesenteric microcirculatory unit. By vital stain with monastral blue B (MBB), the microvascular ECs are focally positive for MBB at the postcapillary venular site, where leukocytes adhere and extravasate. As shown in the histamine-induced diapedesis by transmission electron microscopy, the MBB-positve venular ECs may correspond to the contracted ECs, enabling the polymorphonuclear leukocytes and erythrocytes to extravasate through the widened gaps between the contracted ECs. Actin filaments proven in the microvascular ECs by electron microscopy may play a modulating role in this neutrophil diapedesis. In the process of
gastric ulcer
formation under restrained stress to the rat, the ECs of microvessels in the gastric mucosa, particularly of the mucosal capillaries and postcapillary venules directly innervated by the cholinergic nerves, are altered by the stress-induced overstimulation of the autonomic nerves, inducing the diapedesis of leukocytes and erythrocytes followed by hemorrhagic and ischemic injuries in the gastric mucosa.
Liver cirrhosis
also accompanies endotoxemia. The most prominent electron microscopic alterations of hepatic microvasculature are a decrease of hepatic sinusoidal endothelial fenestrae (SEF) both in diameter and in number, and the formation of basement membranes beneath the hepatic sinusoidal ECs. These ultrastructural changes would be induced by a most potent vasoconstrictor endothelin (ET)-1 through the overexpressed ET(A) and ET(B) receptors on the hepatic stellate cells and the sinusoidal ECs, contributing to the development of portal hypertension as well as to the disturbance in excretion of endotoxin into the bile canaliculi via the hepatocytes from the circulating sinusoidal blood to prevent endotoxemia.
...
PMID:Endothelial cell dysfunction in microvasculature: relevance to disease processes. 1132 41
A case of the very early phase of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative man with alcoholic hepatitis and
cirrhosis
treated with steroids is presented. A 40-year-old man with a 10-year history of alcohol abuse was admitted to hospital with jaundice, fever and macrohematuria. Laboratory examinations revealed neutrophilic leukocytosis and a serum bilirubin level of 13.9 mg/dL. The serum bilirubin level rose to 28.5 mg/dL over 1 month. Prednisolone administered orally for 10 days produced a slight improvement in the jaundice and fever. After an interval of a week, it was resumed and maintained for 22 days (total dose, 1555 mg) until the patient died of a massive hemorrhage from ruptured vessels of a
gastric ulcer
. An autopsy disclosed P. carinii pneumonia in the lower lobe of the left lung, cytomegalovirus infection in both lungs and the esophagus, and esophageal candidiasis. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. carinii pneumonia together with cytomegalovirus infection in an HIV-negative alcoholic patient. The present case suggests that a rare opportunistic infection such as P. carinii pneumonia might be caused by treating
cirrhosis
and alcoholic hepatitis with corticosteroids, even if only for a relatively short period.
...
PMID:Autopsy case of alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis treated with corticosteroids and affected by Pneumocystis carinii and cytomegalovirus pneumonia. 1156 18
The role of Helicobacter pylori in dyspeptic, cirrhotic patients remains unclear. This prospective outpatient study, conducted to assess the relationship of gastroduodenal disease and H. pylori as determined by the (13C) urea breath test, enrolled 109 consecutive cirrhotic patients with dyspepsia. All patients underwent upper-gastrointestinal endoscopy, which revealed respective prevalences of peptic ulcer,
gastric ulcer
, and duodenal ulcer of 41.3%, 23.9%, and 22.9%; H. pylori infection was found in 52.3%. The rate of peptic ulcer disease in the H. pylori-positive (45.6%) and -negative (36.5%) groups was not significantly different; neither was the prevalence of H. pylori in patients with or without portal hypertensive gastropathy and with or without esophageal varices. The relationship between peptic ulcer disease and H. pylori in dyspeptic patients with
cirrhosis
appears to be weak. Likewise, no significant relationship was evident between H. pylori and portal hypertensive gastropathy or esophageal varices. This organism may not be a major pathogenetic factor in gastroduodenal diseases in dyspeptic patients with
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Role of Helicobacter pylori in cirrhotic patients with dyspepsia: a 13C-urea breath test study. 1157 26
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